the sex. Here is
another advantage to be gained from prolonged innocence; you may take
advantage of his dawning sensibility to sow the first seeds of humanity
in the heart of the young adolescent. This advantage is all the greater
because this is the only time in his life when such efforts may be really
successful.
I have always observed that young men, corrupted in early youth and
addicted to women and debauchery, are inhuman and cruel; their passionate
temperament makes them impatient, vindictive, and angry; their imagination
fixed on one object only, refuses all others; mercy and pity are alike
unknown to them; they would have sacrificed father, mother, the whole
world, to the least of their pleasures. A young man, on the other hand,
brought up in happy innocence, is drawn by the first stirrings of nature
to the tender and affectionate passions; his warm heart is touched by
the sufferings of his fellow-creatures; he trembles with delight when
he meets his comrade, his arms can embrace tenderly, his eyes can shed
tears of pity; he learns to be sorry for offending others through his
shame at causing annoyance. If the eager warmth of his blood makes him
quick, hasty, and passionate, a moment later you see all his natural
kindness of heart in the eagerness of his repentance; he weeps, he groans
over the wound he has given; he would atone for the blood he has shed
with his own; his anger dies away, his pride abases itself before the
consciousness of his wrong-doing. Is he the injured party, in the height
of his fury an excuse, a word, disarms him; he forgives the wrongs of
others as whole-heartedly as he repairs his own. Adolescence is not
the age of hatred or vengeance; it is the age of pity, mercy, and generosity.
Yes, I maintain, and I am not afraid of the testimony of experience,
a youth of good birth, one who has preserved his innocence up to the
age of twenty, is at that age the best, the most generous, the most
loving, and the most lovable of men. You never heard such a thing; I
can well believe that philosophers such as you, brought up among the
corruption of the public schools, are unaware of it.
Man's weakness makes him sociable. Our common sufferings draw our hearts
to our fellow-creatures; we should have no duties to mankind if we were
not men. Every affection is a sign of insufficiency; if each of us had
no need of others, we should hardly think of associating with them.
So our frail happiness has its roots in our weakness. A really happy
man is a hermit; God only enjoys absolute happiness; but which of us
has any idea what that means? If any imperfect creature were self-sufficing,
what would he have to enjoy? To our thinking he would be wretched and
alone. I do not understand how one who has need of nothing could love
anything, nor do I understand how he who loves nothing can be happy.
Hence it follows that we are drawn towards our fellow-creatures less
by our feeling for their joys than for their sorrows; for in them we
discern more plainly a nature like our own, and a pledge of their affection
for us. If our common needs create a bond of interest our common sufferings
create a bond of affection. The sight of a happy man arouses in others
envy rather than love, we are ready to accuse him of usurping a right
which is not his, of seeking happiness for himself alone, and our selfishness
suffers an additional pang in the thought that this man has no need
of us. But who does not pity the wretch when he beholds his sufferings?
who would not deliver him from his woes if a wish could do it? Imagination
puts us more readily in the place of the miserable man than of the happy
man; we feel that the one condition touches us more nearly than the
other. Pity is sweet, because, when we put ourselves in the place of
one who suffers, we are aware, nevertheless, of the pleasure of not
suffering like him. Envy is bitter, because the sight of a happy man,
far from putting the envious in his place, inspires him with regret
that he is not there. The one seems to exempt us from the pains he suffers,
the other seems to deprive us of the good things he enjoys.
Do you desire to stimulate and nourish the first stirrings of awakening
sensibility in the heart of a young man, do you desire to incline his
disposition towards kindly deed and thought, do not cause the seeds
of pride, vanity, and envy to spring up in him through the misleading
picture of the happiness of mankind; do not show him to begin with the
pomp of courts, the pride of palaces, the delights of pageants; do not
take him into society and into brilliant assemblies; do not show him
the outside of society till you have made him capable of estimating
it at its true worth. To show him the world before he is acquainted
with men, is not to train him, but to corrupt him; not to teach, but
to mislead.
By nature men are neither kings, nobles, courtiers, nor millionaires.
All men are born poor and naked, all are liable to the sorrows of life,
its disappointments, its ills, its needs, its suffering of every kind;
and all are condemned at length to die. This is what it really means
to be a man, this is what no mortal can escape. Begin then with the
study of the essentials of humanity, that which really constitutes mankind.
At sixteen the adolescent knows what it is to suffer, for he himself
has suffered; but he scarcely realises that others suffer too; to see
without feeling is not knowledge, and as I have said again and again
the child who does not picture the feelings of others knows no ills
but his own; but when his imagination is kindled by the first beginnings
of growing sensibility, he begins to perceive himself in his fellow-creatures,
to be touched by their cries, to suffer in their sufferings. It is at
this time that the sorrowful picture of suffering humanity should stir
his heart with the first touch of pity he has ever known.
If it is not easy to discover this opportunity in your scholars, whose
fault is it? You taught them so soon to play at feeling, you taught
them so early its language, that speaking continually in the same strain
they turn your lessons against yourself, and give you no chance of discovering
when they cease to lie, and begin to feel what they say. But look at
Emile; I have led him up to this age, and he has neither felt nor pretended
to feel. He has never said, "I love you dearly," till he knew
what it was to love; he has never been taught what expression to assume
when he enters the room of his father, his mother, or his sick tutor;
he has not learnt the art of affecting a sorrow he does not feel. He
has never pretended to weep for the death of any one, for he does not
know what it is to die. There is the same insensibility in his heart
as in his manners. Indifferent, like every child, to every one but himself,
he takes no interest in any one; his only peculiarity is that he will
not pretend to take such an interest; he is less deceitful than others.
Emile having thought little about creatures of feeling will be a long
time before he knows what is meant by pain and death. Groans and cries
will begin to stir his compassion, he will turn away his eyes at the
sight of blood; the convulsions of a dying animal will cause him I know
not what anguish before he knows the source of these impulses. If he
were still stupid and barbarous he would not feel them; if he were more
learned he would recognise their source; he has compared ideas too frequently
already to be insensible, but not enough to know what he feels.
So pity is born, the first relative sentiment which touches the human
heart according to the order of nature. To become sensitive and pitiful
the child must know that he has fellow-creatures who suffer as he has
suffered, who feel the pains he has felt, and others which he can form
some idea of, being capable of feeling them himself. Indeed, how can
we let ourselves be stirred by pity unless we go beyond ourselves, and
identify ourselves with the suffering animal, by leaving, so to speak,
our own nature and taking his. We only suffer so far as we suppose he
suffers; the suffering is not ours but his. So no one becomes sensitive
till his imagination is aroused and begins to carry him outside himself.
What should we do to stimulate and nourish this growing sensibility,
to direct it, and to follow its natural bent? Should we not present
to the young man objects on which the expansive force of his heart may
take effect, objects which dilate it, which extend it to other creatures,
which take him outside himself? should we not carefully remove everything
that narrows, concentrates, and strengthens the power of the human self?
that is to say, in other words, we should arouse in him kindness, goodness,
pity, and beneficence, all the gentle and attractive passions which
are naturally pleasing to man; those passions prevent the growth of
envy, covetousness, hatred, all the repulsive and cruel passions which
make our sensibility not merely a cipher but a minus quantity, passions
which are the curse of those who feel them.
I think I can sum up the whole of the preceding reflections in two or
three maxims, definite, straightforward, and easy to understand.
FIRST MAXIM.--It is not in human nature to put ourselves in the place
of those who are happier than ourselves, but only in the place of those
who can claim our pity.
If you find exceptions to this rule, they are more apparent than real.
Thus we do not put ourselves in the place of the rich or great when
we become fond of them; even when our affection is real, we only appropriate
to ourselves a part of their welfare. Sometimes we love the rich man
in the midst of misfortunes; but so long as he prospers he has no real
friend, except the man who is not deceived by appearances, who pities
rather than envies him in spite of his prosperity.
The happiness belonging to certain states of life appeals to us; take,
for instance, the life of a shepherd in the country. The charm of seeing
these good people so happy is not poisoned by envy; we are genuinely
interested in them. Why is this? Because we feel we can descend into
this state of peace and innocence and enjoy the same happiness; it is
an alternative which only calls up pleasant thoughts, so long as the
wish is as good as the deed. It is always pleasant to examine our stores,
to contemplate our own wealth, even when we do not mean to spend it.
From this we see that to incline a young man to humanity you must not
make him admire the brilliant lot of others; you must show him life
in its sorrowful aspects and arouse his fears. Thus it becomes clear
that he must force his own way to happiness, without interfering with
the happiness of others.
SECOND MAXIM.--We never pity another's woes unless we know we may suffer
in like manner ourselves.
"Non ignara mali, miseris succurrere disco."--Virgil.
I know nothing go fine, so full of meaning, so touching, so true as
these words.
Why have kings no pity on their people? Because they never expect to
be ordinary men. Why are the rich so hard on the poor? Because they
have no fear of becoming poor. Why do the nobles look down upon the
people? Because a nobleman will never be one of the lower classes. Why
are the Turks generally kinder and more hospitable than ourselves? Because,
under their wholly arbitrary system of government, the rank and wealth
of individuals are always uncertain and precarious, so that they do
not regard poverty and degradation as conditions with which they have
no concern; to-morrow, any one may himself be in the same position as
those on whom he bestows alms to-day. This thought, which occurs again
and again in eastern romances, lends them a certain tenderness which
is not to be found in our pretentious and harsh morality.
So do not train your pupil to look down from the height of his glory
upon the sufferings of the unfortunate, the labours of the wretched,
and do not hope to teach him to pity them while he considers them as
far removed from himself. Make him thoroughly aware of the fact that
the fate of these unhappy persons may one day be his own, that his feet
are standing on the edge of the abyss, into which he may be plunged
at any moment by a thousand unexpected irresistible misfortunes. Teach
him to put no trust in birth, health, or riches; show him all the changes
of fortune; find him examples--there are only too many of them--in which
men of higher rank than himself have sunk below the condition of these
wretched ones. Whether by their own fault or another's is for the present
no concern of ours; does he indeed know the meaning of the word fault?
Never interfere with the order in which he acquires knowledge, and teach
him only through the means within his reach; it needs no great learning
to perceive that all the prudence of mankind cannot make certain whether
he will be alive or dead in an hour's time, whether before nightfall
he will not be grinding his teeth in the pangs of nephritis, whether
a month hence he will be rich or poor, whether in a year's time he may
not be rowing an Algerian galley under the lash of the slave-driver.
Above all do not teach him this, like his catechism, in cold blood;
let him see and feel the calamities which overtake men; surprise and
startle his imagination with the perils which lurk continually about
a man's path; let him see the pitfalls all about him, and when he hears
you speak of them, let him cling more closely to you for fear lest he
should fall. "You will make him timid and cowardly," do you
say? We shall see; let us make him kindly to begin with, that is what
matters most.
THIRD MAXIM.--The pity we feel for others is proportionate, not to the
amount of the evil, but to the feelings we attribute to the sufferers.
We only pity the wretched so far as we think they feel the need of pity.
The bodily effect of our sufferings is less than one would suppose;
it is memory that prolongs the pain, imagination which projects it into
the future, and makes us really to be pitied. This is, I think, one
of the reasons why we are more callous to the sufferings of animals
than of men, although a fellow-feeling ought to make us identify ourselves
equally with either. We scarcely pity the cart-horse in his shed, for
we do not suppose that while he is eating his hay he is thinking of
the blows he has received and the labours in store for him. Neither
do we pity the sheep grazing in the field, though we know it is about
to be slaughtered, for we believe it knows nothing of the fate in store
for it. In this way we also become callous to the fate of our fellow-men,
and the rich console themselves for the harm done by them to the poor,
by the assumption that the poor are too stupid to feel. I usually judge
of the value any one puts on the welfare of his fellow-creatures by
what he seems to think of them. We naturally think lightly of the happiness
of those we despise. It need not surprise you that politicians speak
so scornfully of the people, and philosophers profess to think mankind
so wicked.
The people are mankind; those who do not belong to the people are so
few in number that they are not worth counting. Man is the same in every
station of life; if that be so, those ranks to which most men belong
deserve most honour. All distinctions of rank fade away before the eyes
of a thoughtful person; he sees the same passions, the same feelings
in the noble and the guttersnipe; there is merely a slight difference
in speech, and more or less artificiality of tone; and if there is indeed
any essential difference between them, the disadvantage is all on the
side of those who are more sophisticated. The people show themselves
as they are, and they are not attractive; but the fashionable world
is compelled to adopt a disguise; we should be horrified if we saw it
as it really is.
There is, so our wiseacres tell us, the same amount of happiness and
sorrow in every station. This saying is as deadly in its effects as
it is incapable of proof; if all are equally happy why should I trouble
myself about any one? Let every one stay where he is; leave the slave
to be ill-treated, the sick man to suffer, and the wretched to perish;
they have nothing to gain by any change in their condition. You enumerate
the sorrows of the rich, and show the vanity of his empty pleasures;
what barefaced sophistry! The rich man's sufferings do not come from
his position, but from himself alone when he abuses it. He is not to
be pitied were he indeed more miserable than the poor, for his ills
are of his own making, and he could be happy if he chose. But the sufferings
of the poor man come from external things, from the hardships fate has
imposed upon him. No amount of habit can accustom him to the bodily
ills of fatigue, exhaustion, and hunger. Neither head nor heart can
serve to free him from the sufferings of his condition. How is Epictetus
the better for knowing beforehand that his master will break his leg
for him; does he do it any the less? He has to endure not only the pain
itself but the pains of anticipation. If the people were as wise as
we assume them to be stupid, how could they be other than they are?
Observe persons of this class; you will see that, with a different way
of speaking, they have as much intelligence and more common-sense than
yourself. Have respect then for your species; remember that it consists
essentially of the people, that if all the kings and all the philosophers
were removed they would scarcely be missed, and things would go on none
the worse. In a word, teach your pupil to love all men, even those who
fail to appreciate him; act in such way that he is not a member of any
class, but takes his place in all alike: speak in his hearing of the
human race with tenderness, and even with pity, but never with scorn.
You are a man; do not dishonour mankind.
It is by these ways and others like them--how different from the beaten
paths--that we must reach the heart of the young adolescent And stimulate
in him the first impulses of nature; we must develop that heart and
open its doors to his fellow-creatures, and there must be as little
self-interest as possible mixed up with these impulses; above all, no
vanity, no emulation, no boasting, none of those sentiments which force
us to compare ourselves with others; for such comparisons are never
made without arousing some measure of hatred against those who dispute
our claim to the first place, were it only in our own estimation. Then
we must be either blind or angry, a bad man or a fool; let us try to
avoid this dilemma. Sooner or later these dangerous passions will appear,
so you tell me, in spite of us. I do not deny it. There is a time and
place for everything; I am only saying that we should not help to arouse
these passions.
This is the spirit of the method to be laid down. In this case examples
and illustrations are useless, for here we find the beginning of the
countless differences of character, and every example I gave would possibly
apply to only one case in a hundred thousand. It is at this age that
the clever teacher begins his real business, as a student and a philosopher
who knows how to probe the heart and strives to guide it aright. While
the young man has not learnt to pretend, while he does not even know
the meaning of pretence, you see by his look, his manner, his gestures,
the impression he has received from any object presented to him; you
read in his countenance every impulse of his heart; by watching his
expression you learn to protect his impulses and actually to control
them.
It has been commonly observed that blood, wounds, cries and groans,
the preparations for painful operations, and everything which directs
the senses towards things connected with suffering, are usually the
first to make an impression on all men. The idea of destruction, a more
complex matter, does not have so great an effect; the thought of death
affects us later and less forcibly, for no one knows from his own experience
what it is to die; you must have seen corpses to feel the agonies of
the dying. But when once this idea is established in the mind, there
is no spectacle more dreadful in our eyes, whether because of the idea
of complete destruction which it arouses through our senses, or because
we know that this moment must come for each one of us and we feel ourselves
all the more keenly affected by a situation from which we know there
is no escape.
These various impressions differ in manner and in degree, according
to the individual character of each one of us and his former habits,
but they are universal and no one is altogether free from them. There
are other impressions less universal and of a later growth, impressions
most suited to sensitive souls, such impressions as we receive from
moral suffering, inward grief, the sufferings of the mind, depression,
and sadness. There are men who can be touched by nothing but groans
and tears; the suppressed sobs of a heart labouring under sorrow would
never win a sigh; the sight of a downcast visage, a pale and gloomy
countenance, eyes which can weep no longer, would never draw a tear
from them. The sufferings of the mind are as nothing to them; they weigh
them, their own mind feels nothing; expect nothing from such persons
but inflexible severity, harshness, cruelty. They may be just and upright,
but not merciful, generous, or pitiful. They may, I say, be just, if
a man can indeed be just without being merciful.
But do not be in a hurry to judge young people by this standard, more
especially those who have been educated rightly, who have no idea of
the moral sufferings they have never had to endure; for once again they
can only pity the ills they know, and this apparent insensibility is
soon transformed into pity when they begin to feel that there are in
human life a thousand ills of which they know nothing. As for Emile,
if in childhood he was distinguished by simplicity and good sense, in
his youth he will show a warm and tender heart; for the reality of the
feelings depends to a great extent on the accuracy of the ideas.
But why call him hither? More than one reader will reproach me no doubt
for departing from my first intention and forgetting the lasting happiness
I promised my pupil. The sorrowful, the dying, such sights of pain and
woe, what happiness, what delight is this for a young heart on the threshold
of life? His gloomy tutor, who proposed to give him such a pleasant
education, only introduces him to life that he may suffer. This is what
they will say, but what care I? I promised to make him happy, not to
make him seem happy. Am I to blame if, deceived as usual by the outward
appearances, you take them for the reality?
Let us take two young men at the close of their early education, and
let them enter the world by opposite doors. The one mounts at once to
Olympus, and moves in the smartest society; he is taken to court, he
is presented in the houses of the great, of the rich, of the pretty
women. I assume that he is everywhere made much of, and I do not regard
too closely the effect of this reception on his reason; I assume it
can stand it. Pleasures fly before him, every day provides him with
fresh amusements; he flings himself into everything with an eagerness
which carries you away. You find him busy, eager, and curious; his first
wonder makes a great impression on you; you think him happy; but behold
the state of his heart; you think he is rejoicing, I think he suffers.
What does he see when first he opens his eyes? all sorts of so-called
pleasures, hitherto unknown. Most of these pleasures are only for a
moment within his reach, and seem to show themselves only to inspire
regret for their loss. Does he wander through a palace; you see by his
uneasy curiosity that he is asking why his father's house is not like
it. Every question shows you that he is comparing himself all the time
with the owner of this grand place. And all the mortification arising
from this comparison at once revolts and stimulates his vanity. If he
meets a young man better dressed than himself, I find him secretly complaining
of his parents' meanness. If he is better dressed than another, he suffers
because the latter is his superior in birth or in intellect, and all
his gold lace is put to shame by a plain cloth coat. Does he shine unrivalled
in some assembly, does he stand on tiptoe that they may see him better,
who is there who does not secretly desire to humble the pride and vanity
of the young fop? Everybody is in league against him; the disquieting
glances of a solemn man, the biting phrases of some satirical person,
do not fail to reach him, and if it were only one man who despised him,
the scorn of that one would poison in a moment the applause of the rest.
Let us grant him everything, let us not grudge him charm and worth;
let him be well-made, witty, and attractive; the women will run after
him; but by pursuing him before he is in love with them, they will inspire
rage rather than love; he will have successes, but neither rapture nor
passion to enjoy them. As his desires are always anticipated; they never
have time to spring up among his pleasures, so he only feels the tedium
of restraint. Even before he knows it he is disgusted and satiated with
the sex formed to be the delight of his own; if he continues its pursuit
it is only through vanity, and even should he really be devoted to women,
he will not be the only brilliant, the only attractive young man, nor
will he always find his mistresses prodigies of fidelity.
I say nothing of the vexation, the deceit, the crimes, and the remorse
of all kinds, inseparable from such a life. We know that experience
of the world disgusts us with it; I am speaking only of the drawbacks
belonging to youthful illusions.
Hitherto the young man has lived in the bosom of his family and his
friends, and has been the sole object of their care; what a change to
enter all at once into a region where he counts for so little; to find
himself plunged into another sphere, he who has been so long the centre
of his own. What insults, what humiliation, must he endure, before he
loses among strangers the ideas of his own importance which have been
formed and nourished among his own people! As a child everything gave
way to him, everybody flocked to him; as a young man he must give place
to every one, or if he preserves ever so little of his former airs,
what harsh lessons will bring him to himself! Accustomed to get everything
he wants without any difficulty, his wants are many, and he feels continual
privations. He is tempted by everything that flatters him; what others
have, he must have too; he covets everything, he envies every one, he
would always be master. He is devoured by vanity, his young heart is
enflamed by unbridled passions, jealousy and hatred among the rest;
all these violent passions burst out at once; their sting rankles in
him in the busy world, they return with him at night, he comes back
dissatisfied with himself, with others; he falls asleep among a thousand
foolish schemes disturbed by a thousand fancies, and his pride shows
him even in his dreams those fancied pleasures; he is tormented by a
desire which will never be satisfied. So much for your pupil; let us
turn to mine.
If the first thing to make an impression on him is something sorrowful
his first return to himself is a feeling of pleasure. When he sees how
many ills he has escaped he thinks he is happier than he fancied. He
shares the suffering of his fellow-creatures, but he shares it of his
own free will and finds pleasure in it. He enjoys at once the pity he
feels for their woes and the joy of being exempt from them; he feels
in himself that state of vigour which projects us beyond ourselves,
and bids us carry elsewhere the superfluous activity of our well-being.
To pity another's woes we must indeed know them, but we need not feel
them. When we have suffered, when we are in fear of suffering, we pity
those who suffer; but when we suffer ourselves, we pity none but ourselves.
But if all of us, being subject ourselves to the ills of life, only
bestow upon others the sensibility we do not actually require for ourselves,
it follows that pity must be a very pleasant feeling, since it speaks
on our behalf; and, on the other hand, a hard-hearted man is always
unhappy, since the state of his heart leaves him no superfluous sensibility
to bestow on the sufferings of others.
We are too apt to judge of happiness by appearances; we suppose it is
to be found in the most unlikely places, we seek for it where it cannot
possibly be; mirth is a very doubtful indication of its presence. A
merry man is often a wretch who is trying to deceive others and distract
himself. The men who are jovial, friendly, and contented at their club
are almost always gloomy grumblers at home, and their servants have
to pay for the amusement they give among their friends. True contentment
is neither merry nor noisy; we are jealous of so sweet a sentiment,
when we enjoy it we think about it, we delight in it for fear it should
escape us. A really happy man says little and laughs little; he hugs
his happiness, so to speak, to his heart. Noisy games, violent delight,
conceal the disappointment of satiety. But melancholy is the friend
of pleasure; tears and pity attend our sweetest enjoyment, and great
joys call for tears rather than laughter.
If at first the number and variety of our amusements seem to contribute
to our happiness, if at first the even tenor of a quiet life seems tedious,
when we look at it more closely we discover that the pleasantest habit
of mind consists in a moderate enjoyment which leaves little scope for
desire and aversion. The unrest of passion causes curiosity and fickleness;
the emptiness of noisy pleasures causes weariness. We never weary of
our state when we know none more delightful. Savages suffer less than
other men from curiosity and from tedium; everything is the same to
them--themselves, not their possessions--and they are never weary.
The man of the world almost always wears a mask. He is scarcely ever
himself and is almost a stranger to himself; he is ill at ease when
he is forced into his own company. Not what he is, but what he seems,
is all he cares for.
I cannot help picturing in the countenance of the young man I have just
spoken of an indefinable but unpleasant impertinence, smoothness, and
affectation, which is repulsive to a plain man, and in the countenance
of my own pupil a simple and interesting expression which indicates
the real contentment and the calm of his mind; an expression which inspires
respect and confidence, and seems only to await the establishment of
friendly relations to bestow his own confidence in return. It is thought
that the expression is merely the development of certain features designed
by nature. For my own part I think that over and above this development
a man's face is shaped, all unconsciously, by the frequent and habitual
influence of certain affections of the heart. These affections are shown
on the face, there is nothing more certain; and when they become habitual,
they must surely leave lasting traces. This is why I think the expression
shows the character, and that we can sometimes read one another without
seeking mysterious explanations in powers we do not possess.
A child has only two distinct feelings, joy and sorrow; he laughs or
he cries; he knows no middle course, and he is constantly passing from
one extreme to the other. On account of these perpetual changes there
is no lasting impression on the face, and no expression; but when the
child is older and more sensitive, his feelings are keener or more permanent,
and these deeper impressions leave traces more difficult to erase; and
the habitual state of the feelings has an effect on the features which
in course of time becomes ineffaceable. Still it is not uncommon to
meet with men whose expression varies with their age. I have met with
several, and I have always found that those whom I could observe and
follow had also changed their habitual temper. This one observation
thoroughly confirmed would seem to me decisive, and it is not out of
place in a treatise on education, where it is a matter of importance,
that we should learn to judge the feelings of the heart by external
signs.
I do not know whether my young man will be any the less amiable for
not having learnt to copy conventional manners and to feign sentiments
which are not his own; that does not concern me at present, I only know
he will be more affectionate; and I find it difficult to believe that
he, who cares for nobody but himself, can so far disguise his true feelings
as to please as readily as he who finds fresh happiness for himself
in his affection for others. But with regard to this feeling of happiness,
I think I have said enough already for the guidance of any sensible
reader, and to show that I have not contradicted myself.
I return to my system, and I say, when the critical age approaches,
present to young people spectacles which restrain rather than excite
them; put off their dawning imagination with objects which, far from
inflaming their senses, put a check to their activity. Remove them from
great cities, where the flaunting attire and the boldness of the women
hasten and anticipate the teaching of nature, where everything presents
to their view pleasures of which they should know nothing till they
are of an age to choose for themselves. Bring them back to their early
home, where rural simplicity allows the passions of their age to develop
more slowly; or if their taste for the arts keeps them in town, guard
them by means of this very taste from a dangerous idleness. Choose carefully
their company, their occupations, and their pleasures; show them nothing
but modest and pathetic pictures which are touching but not seductive,
and nourish their sensibility without stimulating their senses. Remember
also, that the danger of excess is not confined to any one place, and
that immoderate passions always do irreparable damage. You need not
make your pupil a sick-nurse or a Brother of Pity; you need not distress
him by the perpetual sight of pain and suffering; you need not take
him from one hospital to another, from the gallows to the prison. He
must be softened, not hardened, by the sight of human misery. When we
have seen a sight it ceases to impress us, use is second nature, what
is always before our eyes no longer appeals to the imagination, and
it is only through the imagination that we can feel the sorrows of others;
this is why priests and doctors who are always beholding death and suffering
become so hardened. Let your pupil therefore know something of the lot
of man and the woes of his fellow-creatures, but let him not see them
too often. A single thing, carefully selected and shown at the right
time, will fill him with pity and set him thinking for a month. His
opinion about anything depends not so much on what he sees, but on how
it reacts on himself; and his lasting impression of any object depends
less on the object itself than on the point of view from which he regards
it. Thus by a sparing use of examples, lessons, and pictures, you may
blunt the sting of sense and delay nature while following her own lead.
As he acquires knowledge, choose what ideas he shall attach to it; as
his passions awake, select scenes calculated to repress them. A veteran,
as distinguished for his character as for his courage, once told me
that in early youth his father, a sensible man but extremely pious,
observed that through his growing sensibility he was attracted by women,
and spared no pains to restrain him; but at last when, in spite of all
his care, his son was about to escape from his control, he decided to
take him to a hospital, and, without telling him what to expect, he
introduced him into a room where a number of wretched creatures were
expiating, under a terrible treatment, the vices which had brought them
into this plight. This hideous and revolting spectacle sickened the
young man. "Miserable libertine," said his father vehemently,
"begone; follow your vile tastes; you will soon be only too glad
to be admitted to this ward, and a victim to the most shameful sufferings,
you will compel your father to thank God when you are dead."
These few words, together with the striking spectacle he beheld, made
an impression on the young man which could never be effaced. Compelled
by his profession to pass his youth in garrison, he preferred to face
all the jests of his comrades rather than to share their evil ways.
"I have been a man," he said to me, "I have had my weaknesses,
but even to the present day the sight of a harlot inspires me with horror."
Say little to your pupil, but choose time, place, and people; then rely
on concrete examples for your teaching, and be sure it will take effect.
The way childhood is spent is no great matter; the evil which may find
its way is not irremediable, and the good which may spring up might
come later. But it is not so in those early years when a youth really
begins to live. This time is never long enough for what there is to
be done, and its importance demands unceasing attention; this is why
I lay so much stress on the art of prolonging it. One of the best rules
of good farming is to keep things back as much as possible. Let your
progress also be slow and sure; prevent the youth from becoming a man
all at once. While the body is growing the spirits destined to give
vigour to the blood and strength to the muscles are in process of formation
and elaboration. If you turn them into another channel, and permit that
strength which should have gone to the perfecting of one person to go
to the making of another, both remain in a state of weakness and the
work of nature is unfinished. The workings of the mind, in their turn,
are affected by this change, and the mind, as sickly as the body, functions
languidly and feebly. Length and strength of limb are not the same thing
as courage or genius, and I grant that strength of mind does not always
accompany strength of body, when the means of connection between the
two are otherwise faulty. But however well planned they may be, they
will always work feebly if for motive power they depend upon an exhausted,
impoverished supply of blood, deprived of the substance which gives
strength and elasticity to all the springs of the machinery. There is
generally more vigour of mind to be found among men whose early years
have been preserved from precocious vice, than among those whose evil
living has begun at the earliest opportunity; and this is no doubt the
reason why nations whose morals are pure are generally superior in sense
and courage to those whose morals are bad. The latter shine only through
I know not what small and trifling qualities, which they call wit, sagacity,
cunning; but those great and noble features of goodness and reason,
by which a man is distinguished and honoured through good deeds, virtues,
really useful efforts, are scarcely to be found except among the nations
whose morals are pure.
Teachers complain that the energy of this age makes their pupils unruly;
I see that it is so, but are not they themselves to blame? When once
they have let this energy flow through the channel of the senses, do
they not know that they cannot change its course? Will the long and
dreary sermons of the pedant efface from the mind of his scholar the
thoughts of pleasure when once they have found an entrance; will they
banish from his heart the desires by which it is tormented; will they
chill the heat of a passion whose meaning the scholar realises? Will
not the pupil be roused to anger by the obstacles opposed to the only
kind of happiness of which he has any notion? And in the harsh law imposed
upon him before he can understand it, what will he see but the caprice
and hatred of a man who is trying to torment him? Is it strange that
he rebels and hates you too?
I know very well that if one is easy-going one may be tolerated, and
one may keep up a show of authority. But I fail to see the use of an
authority over the pupil which is only maintained by fomenting the vices
it ought to repress; it is like attempting to soothe a fiery steed by
making it leap over a precipice.
Far from being a hindrance to education, this enthusiasm of adolescence
is its crown and coping-stone; this it is that gives you a hold on the
youth's heart when he is no longer weaker than you. His first affections
are the reins by which you control his movements; he was free, and now
I behold him in your power. So long as he loved nothing, he was independent
of everything but himself and his own necessities; as soon as he loves,
he is dependent on his affections. Thus the first ties which unite him
to his species are already formed. When you direct his increasing sensibility
in this direction, do not expect that it will at once include all men,
and that the word "mankind" will have any meaning for him.
Not so; this sensibility will at first confine itself to those like
himself, and these will not be strangers to him, but those he knows,
those whom habit has made dear to him or necessary to him, those who
are evidently thinking and feeling as he does, those whom he perceives
to be exposed to the pains he has endured, those who enjoy the pleasures
he has enjoyed; in a word, those who are so like himself that he is
the more disposed to self-love. It is only after long training, after
much consideration as to his own feelings and the feelings he observes
in others, that he will be able to generalise his individual notions
under the abstract idea of humanity, and add to his individual affections
those which may identify him with the race.
When he becomes capable of affection, he becomes aware of the affection
of others, [Footnote: Affection may be unrequited; not so friendship.
Friendship is a bargain, a contract like any other; though a bargain
more sacred than the rest. The word "friend" has no other
correlation. Any man who is not the friend of his friend is undoubtedly
a rascal; for one can only obtain friendship by giving it, or pretending
to give it.] and he is on the lookout for the signs of that affection.
Do you not see how you will acquire a fresh hold on him? What bands
have you bound about his heart while he was yet unaware of them! What
will he feel, when he beholds himself and sees what you have done for
him; when he can compare himself with other youths, and other tutors
with you! I say, "When he sees it," but beware lest you tell
him of it; if you tell him he will not perceive it. If you claim his
obedience in return for the care bestowed upon him, he will think you
have over-reached him; he will see that while you profess to have cared
for him without reward, you meant to saddle him with a debt and to bind
him to a bargain which he never made. In vain you will add that what
you demand is for his own good; you demand it, and you demand it in
virtue of what you have done without his consent. When a man down on
his luck accepts the shilling which the sergeant professes to give him,
and finds he has enlisted without knowing what he was about, you protest
against the injustice; is it not still more unjust to demand from your
pupil the price of care which he has not even accepted!
Ingratitude would be rarer if kindness were less often the investment
of a usurer. We love those who have done us a kindness; what a natural
feeling! Ingratitude is not to be found in the heart of man, but self-interest
is there; those who are ungrateful for benefits received are fewer than
those who do a kindness for their own ends. If you sell me your gifts,
I will haggle over the price; but if you pretend to give, in order to
sell later on at your own price, you are guilty of fraud; it is the
free gift which is beyond price. The heart is a law to itself; if you
try to bind it, you lose it; give it its liberty, and you make it your
own.
When the fisherman baits his line, the fish come round him without suspicion;
but when they are caught on the hook concealed in the bait, they feel
the line tighten and they try to escape. Is the fisherman a benefactor?
Is the fish ungrateful? Do we find a man forgotten by his benefactor,
unmindful of that benefactor? On the contrary, he delights to speak
of him, he cannot think of him without emotion; if he gets a chance
of showing him, by some unexpected service, that he remembers what he
did for him, how delighted he is to satisfy his gratitude; what a pleasure
it is to earn the gratitude of his benefactor. How delightful to say,
"It is my turn now." This is indeed the teaching of nature;
a good deed never caused ingratitude.
If therefore gratitude is a natural feeling, and you do not destroy
its effects by your blunders, be sure your pupil, as he begins to understand
the value of your care for him, will be grateful for it, provided you
have not put a price upon it; and this will give you an authority over
his heart which nothing can overthrow. But beware of losing this advantage
before it is really yours, beware of insisting on your own importance.
Boast of your services and they become intolerable; forget them and
they will not be forgotten. Until the time comes to treat him as a man
let there be no question of his duty to you, but his duty to himself.
Let him have his freedom if you would make him docile; hide yourself
so that he may seek you; raise his heart to the noble sentiment of gratitude
by only speaking of his own interest. Until he was able to understand
I would not have him told that what was done was for his good; he would
only have understood such words to mean that you were dependent on him
and he would merely have made you his servant. But now that he is beginning
to feel what love is, he also knows what a tender affection may bind
a man to what he loves; and in the zeal which keeps you busy on his
account, he now sees not the bonds of a slave, but the affection of
a friend. Now there is nothing which carries so much weight with the
human heart as the voice of friendship recognised as such, for we know
that it never speaks but for our good. We may think our friend is mistaken,
but we never believe he is deceiving us. We may reject his advice now
and then, but we never scorn it.
We have reached the moral order at last; we have just taken the second
step towards manhood. If this were the place for it, I would try to
show how the first impulses of the heart give rise to the first stirrings
of conscience, and how from the feelings of love and hatred spring the
first notions of good and evil. I would show that justice and kindness
are no mere abstract terms, no mere moral conceptions framed by the
understanding, but true affections of the heart enlightened by reason,
the natural outcome of our primitive affections; that by reason alone,
unaided by conscience, we cannot establish any natural law, and that
all natural right is a vain dream if it does not rest upon some instinctive
need of the human heart. [Footnote: The precept "Do unto others
as you would have them do unto you" has no true foundation but
that of conscience and feeling; for what valid reason is there why I,
being myself, should do what I would do if I were some one else, especially
when I am morally certain I never shall find myself in exactly the same
case; and who will answer for it that if I faithfully follow out this
maxim, I shall get others to follow it with regard to me? The wicked
takes advantage both of the uprightness of the just and of his own injustice;
he will gladly have everybody just but himself. This bargain, whatever
you may say, is not greatly to the advantage of the just. But if the
enthusiasm of an overflowing heart identifies me with my fellow-creature,
if I feel, so to speak, that I will not let him suffer lest I should
suffer too, I care for him because I care for myself, and the reason
of the precept is found in nature herself, which inspires me with the
desire for my own welfare wherever I may be. From this I conclude that
it is false to say that the precepts of natural law are based on reason
only; they have a firmer and more solid foundation. The love of others
springing from self-love, is the source of human justice. The whole
of morality is summed up in the gospel in this summary of the law.]
But I do not think it is my business at present to prepare treatises
on metaphysics and morals, nor courses of study of any kind whatsoever;
it is enough if I indicate the order and development of our feelings
and our knowledge in relation to our growth. Others will perhaps work
out what I have here merely indicated.
Hitherto my Emile has thought only of himself, so his first glance at
his equals leads him to compare himself with them; and the first feeling
excited by this comparison is the desire to be first. It is here that
self-love is transformed into selfishness, and this is the starting
point of all the passions which spring from selfishness. But to determine
whether the passions by which his life will be governed shall be humane
and gentle or harsh and cruel, whether they shall be the passions of
benevolence and pity or those of envy and covetousness, we must know
what he believes his place among men to be, and what sort of obstacles
he expects to have to overcome in order to attain to the position he
seeks.
To guide him in this inquiry, after we have shown him men by means of
the accidents common to the species, we must now show him them by means
of their differences. This is the time for estimating inequality natural
and civil, and for the scheme of the whole social order.
Society must be studied in the individual and the individual in society;
those who desire to treat politics and morals apart from one another
will never understand either. By confining ourselves at first to the
primitive relations, we see how men should be influenced by them and
what passions should spring from them; we see that it is in proportion
to the development of these passions that a man's relations with others
expand or contract. It is not so much strength of arm as moderation
of spirit which makes men free and independent. The man whose wants
are few is dependent on but few people, but those who constantly confound
our vain desires with our bodily needs, those who have made these needs
the basis of human society, are continually mistaking effects for causes,
and they have only confused themselves by their own reasoning.
Since it is impossible in the state of nature that the difference between
man and man should be great enough to make one dependent on another,
there is in fact in this state of nature an actual and indestructible
equality. In the civil state there is a vain and chimerical equality
of right; the means intended for its maintenance, themselves serve to
destroy it; and the power of the community, added to the power of the
strongest for the oppression of the weak, disturbs the sort of equilibrium
which nature has established between them. [Footnote: The universal
spirit of the laws of every country is always to take the part of the
strong against the weak, and the part of him who has against him who
has not; this defect is inevitable, and there is no exception to it.]
From this first contradiction spring all the other contradictions between
the real and the apparent, which are to be found in the civil order.
The many will always be sacrificed to the few, the common weal to private
interest; those specious words--justice and subordination--will always
serve as the tools of violence and the weapons of injustice; hence it
follows that the higher classes which claim to be useful to the rest
are really only seeking their own welfare at the expense of others;
from this we may judge how much consideration is due to them according
to right and justice. It remains to be seen if the rank to which they
have attained is more favourable to their own happiness to know what
opinion each one of us should form with regard to his own lot. This
is the study with which we are now concerned; but to do it thoroughly
we must begin with a knowledge of the human heart.
If it were only a question of showing young people man in his mask,
there would be no need to point him out, and he would always be before
their eyes; but since the mask is not the man, and since they must not
be led away by its specious appearance, when you paint men for your
scholar, paint them as they are, not that he may hate them, but that
he may pity them and have no wish to be like them. In my opinion that
is the most reasonable view a man can hold with regard to his fellow-men.
With this object in view we must take the opposite way from that hitherto
followed, and instruct the youth rather through the experience of others
than through his own. If men deceive him he will hate them; but, if,
while they treat him with respect, he sees them deceiving each other,
he will pity them. "The spectacle of the world," said Pythagoras,
"is like the Olympic games; some are buying and selling and think
only of their gains; others take an active part and strive for glory;
others, and these not the worst, are content to be lookers-on."
I would have you so choose the company of a youth that he should think
well of those among whom he lives, and I would have you so teach him
to know the world that he should think ill of all that takes place in
it. Let him know that man is by nature good, let him feel it, let him
judge his neighbour by himself; but let him see how men are depraved
and perverted by society; let him find the source of all their vices
in their preconceived opinions; let him be disposed to respect the individual,
but to despise the multitude; let him see that all men wear almost the
same mask, but let him also know that some faces are fairer than the
mask that conceals them.
It must be admitted that this method has its drawbacks, and it is not
easy to carry it out; for if he becomes too soon engrossed in watching
other people, if you train him to mark too closely the actions of others,
you will make him spiteful and satirical, quick and decided in his judgments
of others; he will find a hateful pleasure in seeking bad motives, and
will fail to see the good even in that which is really good. He will,
at least, get used to the sight of vice, he will behold the wicked without
horror, just as we get used to seeing the wretched without pity. Soon
the perversity of mankind will be not so much a warning as an excuse;
he will say, "Man is made so," and he will have no wish to
be different from the rest.
But if you wish to teach him theoretically to make him acquainted, not
only with the heart of man, but also with the application of the external
causes which turn our inclinations into vices; when you thus transport
him all at once from the objects of sense to the objects of reason,
you employ a system of metaphysics which he is not in a position to
understand; you fall back into the error, so carefully avoided hitherto,
of giving him lessons which are like lessons, of substituting in his
mind the experience and the authority of the master for his own experience
and the development of his own reason.
To remove these two obstacles at once, and to bring the human heart
within his reach without risk of spoiling his own, I would show him
men from afar, in other times or in other places, so that he may behold
the scene but cannot take part in it. This is the time for history;
with its help he will read the hearts of men without any lessons in
philosophy; with its help he will view them as a mere spectator, dispassionate
and without prejudice; he will view them as their judge, not as their
accomplice or their accuser.
To know men you must behold their actions. In society we hear them talk;
they show their words and hide their deeds; but in history the veil
is drawn aside, and they are judged by their deeds. Their sayings even
help us to understand them; for comparing what they say and what they
do, we see not only what they are but what they would appear; the more
they disguise themselves the more thoroughly they stand revealed.
Unluckily this study has its dangers, its drawbacks of several kinds.
It is difficult to adopt a point of view which will enable one to judge
one's fellow-creatures fairly. It is one of the chief defects of history
to paint men's evil deeds rather than their good ones; it is revolutions
and catastrophes that make history interesting; so long as a nation
grows and prospers quietly in the tranquillity of a peaceful government,
history says nothing; she only begins to speak of nations when, no longer
able to be self-sufficing, they interfere with their neighbours' business,
or allow their neighbours to interfere with their own; history only
makes them famous when they are on the downward path; all our histories
begin where they ought to end. We have very accurate accounts of declining
nations; what we lack is the history of those nations which are multiplying;
they are so happy and so good that history has nothing to tell us of
them; and we see indeed in our own times that the most successful governments
are least talked of. We only hear what is bad; the good is scarcely
mentioned. Only the wicked become famous, the good are forgotten or
laughed to scorn, and thus history, like philosophy, is for ever slandering
mankind.
Moreover, it is inevitable that the facts described in history should
not give an exact picture of what really happened; they are transformed
in the brain of the historian, they are moulded by his interests and
coloured by his prejudices. Who can place the reader precisely in a
position to see the event as it really happened? Ignorance or partiality
disguises everything. What a different impression may be given merely
by expanding or contracting the circumstances of the case without altering
a single historical incident. The same object may be seen from several
points of view, and it will hardly seem the same thing, yet there has
been no change except in the eye that beholds it. Do you indeed do honour
to truth when what you tell me is a genuine fact, but you make it appear
something quite different? A tree more or less, a rock to the right
or to the left, a cloud of dust raised by the wind, how often have these
decided the result of a battle without any one knowing it? Does that
prevent history from telling you the cause of defeat or victory with
as much assurance as if she had been on the spot? But what are the facts
to me, while I am ignorant of their causes, and what lessons can I draw
from an event, whose true cause is unknown to me? The historian indeed
gives me a reason, but he invents it; and criticism itself, of which
we hear so much, is only the art of guessing, the art of choosing from
among several lies, the lie that is most like truth.
Have you ever read Cleopatra or Cassandra or any books of the kind?
The author selects some well-known event, he then adapts it to his purpose,
adorns it with details of his own invention, with people who never existed,
with imaginary portraits; thus he piles fiction on fiction to lend a
charm to his story. I see little difference between such romances and
your histories, unless it is that the novelist draws more on his own
imagination, while the historian slavishly copies what another has imagined;
I will also admit, if you please, that the novelist has some moral purpose
good or bad, about which the historian scarcely concerns himself.
You will tell me that accuracy in history is of less interest than a
true picture of men and manners; provided the human heart is truly portrayed,
it matters little that events should be accurately recorded; for after
all you say, what does it matter to us what happened two thousand years
ago? You are right if the portraits are indeed truly given according
to nature; but if the model is to be found for the most part in the
historian's imagination, are you not falling into the very error you
intended to avoid, and surrendering to the authority of the historian
what you would not yield to the authority of the teacher? If my pupil
is merely to see fancy pictures, I would rather draw them myself; they
will, at least, be better suited to him.
The worst historians for a youth are those who give their opinions.
Facts! Facts! and let him decide for himself; this is how he will learn
to know mankind. If he is always directed by the opinion of the author,
he is only seeing through the eyes of another person, and when those
ayes are no longer at his disposal he can see nothing.
I leave modern history on one side, not only because it has no character
and all our people are alike, but because our historians, wholly taken
up with effect, think of nothing but highly coloured portraits, which
often represent nothing. [Footnote: Take, for instance, Guicciardini,
Streda, Solis, Machiavelli, and sometimes even De Thou himself. Vertot
is almost the only one who knows how to describe without giving fancy
portraits.] The old historians generally give fewer portraits and bring
more intelligence and common-sense to their judgments; but even among
them there is plenty of scope for choice, and you must not begin with
the wisest but with the simplest. I would not put Polybius or Sallust
into the hands of a youth; Tacitus is the author of the old, young men
cannot understand him; you must learn to see in human actions the simplest
features of the heart of man before you try to sound its depths. You
must be able to read facts clearly before you begin to study maxims.
Philosophy in the form of maxims is only fit for the experienced. Youth
should never deal with the general, all its teaching should deal with
individual instances.
To my mind Thucydides is the true model of historians. He relates facts
without giving his opinion; but he omits no circumstance adapted to
make us judge for ourselves. He puts everything that he relates before
his reader; far from interposing between the facts and the readers,
he conceals himself; we seem not to read but to see. Unfortunately he
speaks of nothing but war, and in his stories we only see the least
instructive part of the world, that is to say the battles. The virtues
and defects of the Retreat of the Ten Thousand and the Commentaries
of Caesar are almost the same. The kindly Herodotus, without portraits,
without maxims, yet flowing, simple, full of details calculated to delight
and interest in the highest degree, would be perhaps the best historian
if these very details did not often degenerate into childish folly,
better adapted to spoil the taste of youth than to form it; we need
discretion before we can read him. I say nothing of Livy, his turn will
come; but he is a statesman, a rhetorician, he is everything which is
unsuitable for a youth.
History in general is lacking because it only takes note of striking
and clearly marked facts which may be fixed by names, places, and dates;
but the slow evolution of these facts, which cannot be definitely noted
in this way, still remains unknown. We often find in some battle, lost
or won, the ostensible cause of a revolution which was inevitable before
this battle took place. War only makes manifest events already determined
by moral causes, which few historians can perceive.
The philosophic spirit has turned the thoughts of many of the historians
of our times in this direction; but I doubt whether truth has profited
by their labours. The rage for systems has got possession of all alike,
no one seeks to see things as they are, but only as they agree with
his system.
Add to all these considerations the fact that history shows us actions
rather than men, because she only seizes men at certain chosen times
in full dress; she only portrays the statesman when he is prepared to
be seen; she does not follow him to his home, to his study, among his
family and his friends; she only shows him in state; it is his clothes
rather than himself that she describes.
I would prefer to begin the study of the human heart with reading the
lives of individuals; for then the man hides himself in vain, the historian
follows him everywhere; he never gives him a moment's grace nor any
corner where he can escape the piercing eye of the spectator; and when
he thinks he is concealing himself, then it is that the writer shows
him up most plainly.
"Those who write lives," says Montaigne, "in so far as
they delight more in ideas than in events, more in that which comes
from within than in that which comes from without, these are the writers
I prefer; for this reason Plutarch is in every way the man for me."
It is true that the genius of men in groups or nations is very different
from the character of the individual man, and that we have a very imperfect
knowledge of the human heart if we do not also examine it in crowds;
but it is none the less true that to judge of men we must study the
individual man, and that he who had a perfect knowledge of the inclinations
of each individual might foresee all their combined effects in the body
of the nation.
We must go back again to the ancients, for the reasons already stated,
and also because all the details common and familiar, but true and characteristic,
are banished by modern stylists, so that men are as much tricked out
by our modern authors in their private life as in public. Propriety,
no less strict in literature than in life, no longer permits us to say
anything in public which we might not do in public; and as we may only
show the man dressed up for his part, we never see a man in our books
any more than we do on the stage. The lives of kings may be written
a hundred times, but to no purpose; we shall never have another Suetonius.
The excellence of Plutarch consists in these very details which we are
no longer permitted to describe. With inimitable grace he paints the
great man in little things; and he is so happy in the choice of his
instances that a word, a smile, a gesture, will often suffice to indicate
the nature of his hero. With a jest Hannibal cheers his frightened soldiers,
and leads them laughing to the battle which will lay Italy at his feet;
Agesilaus riding on a stick makes me love the conqueror of the great
king; Caesar passing through a poor village and chatting with his friends
unconsciously betrays the traitor who professed that he only wished
to be Pompey's equal. Alexander swallows a draught without a word--it
is the finest moment in his life; Aristides writes his own name on the
shell and so justifies his title; Philopoemen, his mantle laid aside,
chops firewood in the kitchen of his host. This is the true art of portraiture.
Our disposition does not show itself in our features, nor our character
in our great deeds; it is trifles that show what we really are. What
is done in public is either too commonplace or too artificial, and our
modern authors are almost too grand to tell us anything else.
M. de Turenne was undoubtedly one of the greatest men of the last century.
They have had the courage to make his life interesting by the little
details which make us know and love him; but how many details have they
felt obliged to omit which might have made us know and love him better
still? I will only quote one which I have on good authority, one which
Plutarch would never have omitted, and one which Ramsai would never
have inserted had he been acquainted with it.
On a hot summer's day Viscount Turenne in a little white vest and nightcap
was standing at the window of his antechamber; one of his men came up
and, misled by the dress, took him for one of the kitchen lads whom
he knew. He crept up behind him and smacked him with no light hand.
The man he struck turned round hastily. The valet saw it was his master
and trembled at the sight of his face. He fell on his knees in desperation.
"Sir, I thought it was George." "Well, even if it was
George," exclaimed Turenne rubbing the injured part, "you
need not have struck so hard." You do not dare to say this, you
miserable writers! Remain for ever without humanity and without feeling;
steel your hard hearts in your vile propriety, make yourselves contemptible
through your high-mightiness. But as for you, dear youth, when you read
this anecdote, when you are touched by all the kindliness displayed
even on the impulse of the moment, read also the littleness of this
great man when it was a question of his name and birth. Remember it
was this very Turenne who always professed to yield precedence to his
nephew, so that all men might see that this child was the head of a
royal house. Look on this picture and on that, love nature, despise
popular prejudice, and know the man as he was.
There are few people able to realise what an effect such reading, carefully
directed, will have upon the unspoilt mind of a youth. Weighed down
by books from our earliest childhood, accustomed to read without thinking,
what we read strikes us even less, because we already bear in ourselves
the passions and prejudices with which history and the lives of men
are filled; all that they do strikes us as only natural, for we ourselves
are unnatural and we judge others by ourselves. But imagine my Emile,
who has been carefully guarded for eighteen years with the sole object
of preserving a right judgment and a healthy heart, imagine him when
the curtain goes up casting his eyes for the first time upon the world's
stage; or rather picture him behind the scenes watching the actors don
their costumes, and counting the cords and pulleys which deceive with
their feigned shows the eyes of the spectators. His first surprise will
soon give place to feelings of shame and scorn of his fellow-man; he
will be indignant at the sight of the whole human race deceiving itself
and stooping to this childish folly; he will grieve to see his brothers
tearing each other limb from limb for a mere dream, and transforming
themselves into wild beasts because they could not be content to be
men.
Given the natural disposition of the pupil, there is no doubt that if
the master exercises any sort of prudence or discretion in his choice
of reading, however little he may put him in the way of reflecting on
the subject-matter, this exercise will serve as a course in practical
philosophy, a philosophy better understood and more thoroughly mastered
than all the empty speculations with which the brains of lads are muddled
in our schools. After following the romantic schemes of Pyrrhus, Cineas
asks him what real good he would gain by the conquest of the world,
which he can never enjoy without such great sufferings; this only arouses
in us a passing interest as a smart saying; but Emile will think it
a very wise thought, one which had already occurred to himself, and
one which he will never forget, because there is no hostile prejudice
in his mind to prevent it sinking in. When he reads more of the life
of this madman, he will find that all his great plans resulted in his
death at the hands of a woman, and instead of admiring this pinchbeck
heroism, what will he see in the exploits of this great captain and
the schemes of this great statesman but so many steps towards that unlucky
tile which was to bring life and schemes alike to a shameful death?
All conquerors have not been killed; all usurpers have not failed in
their plans; to minds imbued with vulgar prejudices many of them will
seem happy, but he who looks below the surface and reckons men's happiness
by the condition of their hearts will perceive their wretchedness even
in the midst of their successes; he will see them panting after advancement
and never attaining their prize, he will find them like those inexperienced
travellers among the Alps, who think that every height they see is the
last, who reach its summit only to find to their disappointment there
are loftier peaks beyond.
Augustus, when he had subdued his fellow-citizens and destroyed his
rivals, reigned for forty years over the greatest empire that ever existed;
but all this vast power could not hinder him from beating his head against
the walls, and filling his palace with his groans as he cried to Varus
to restore his slaughtered legions. If he had conquered all his foes
what good would his empty triumphs have done him, when troubles of every
kind beset his path, when his life was threatened by his dearest friends,
and when he had to mourn the disgrace or death of all near and dear
to him? The wretched man desired to rule the world and failed to rule
his own household. What was the result of this neglect? He beheld his
nephew, his adopted child, his son-in-law, perish in the flower of youth,
his grandson reduced to eat the stuffing of his mattress to prolong
his wretched existence for a few hours; his daughter and his granddaughter,
after they had covered him with infamy, died, the one of hunger and
want on a desert island, the other in prison by the hand of a common
archer. He himself, the last survivor of his unhappy house, found himself
compelled by his own wife to acknowledge a monster as his heir. Such
was the fate of the master of the world, so famous for his glory and
his good fortune. I cannot believe that any one of those who admire
his glory and fortune would accept them at the same price.
I have taken ambition as my example, but the play of every human passion
offers similar lessons to any one who will study history to make himself
wise and good at the expense of those who went before. The time is drawing
near when the teaching of the life of Anthony will appeal more forcibly
to the youth than the life of Augustus. Emile will scarcely know where
he is among the many strange sights in his new studies; but he will
know beforehand how to avoid the illusion of passions before they arise,
and seeing how in all ages they have blinded men's eyes, he will be
forewarned of the way in which they may one day blind his own should
he abandon himself to them. [Footnote: It is always prejudice which
stirs up passion in our heart. He who only sees what really exists and
only values what he knows, rarely becomes angry. The errors of our judgment
produce the warmth of our desires.] These lessons, I know, are unsuited
to him, perhaps at need they may prove scanty and ill-timed; but remember
they are not the lessons I wished to draw from this study. To begin
with, I had quite another end in view; and indeed, if this purpose is
unfulfilled, the teacher will be to blame.
Remember that, as soon as selfishness has developed, the self in its
relations to others is always with us, and the youth never observes
others without coming back to himself and comparing himself with them.
From the way young men are taught to study history I see that they are
transformed, so to speak, into the people they behold, that you strive
to make a Cicero, a Trajan, or an Alexander of them, to discourage them
when they are themselves again, to make every one regret that he is
merely himself. There are certain advantages in this plan which I do
not deny; but, so far as Emile is concerned, should it happen at any
time when he is making these comparisons that he wishes to be any one
but himself--were it Socrates or Cato--I have failed entirely; he who
begins to regard himself as a stranger will soon forget himself altogether.
It is not philosophers who know most about men; they only view them
through the preconceived ideas of philosophy, and I know no one so prejudiced
as philosophers. A savage would judge us more sanely. The philosopher
is aware of his own vices, he is indignant at ours, and he says to himself,
"We are all bad alike;" the savage beholds us unmoved and
says, "You are mad." He is right, for no one does evil for
evil's sake. My pupil is that savage, with this difference: Emile has
thought more, he has compared ideas, seen our errors at close quarters,
he is more on his guard against himself, and only judges of what he
knows.
It is our own passions that excite us against the passions of others;
it is our self-interest which makes us hate the wicked; if they did
us no harm we should pity rather than hate them. We should readily forgive
their vices if we could perceive how their own heart punishes those
vices. We are aware of the offence, but we do not see the punishment;
the advantages are plain, the penalty is hidden. The man who thinks
he is enjoying the fruits of his vices is no less tormented by them
than if they had not been successful; the object is different, the anxiety
is the same; in vain he displays his good fortune and hides his heart;
in spite of himself his conduct betrays him; but to discern this, our
own heart must be utterly unlike his.
We are led astray by those passions which we share; we are disgusted
by those that militate against our own interests; and with a want of
logic due to these very passions, we blame in others what we fain would
imitate. Aversion and self-deception are inevitable when we are forced
to endure at another's hands what we ourselves would do in his place.
What then is required for the proper study of men? A great wish to know
men, great impartiality of judgment, a heart sufficiently sensitive
to understand every human passion, and calm enough to be free from passion.
If there is any time in our life when this study is likely to be appreciated,
it is this that I have chosen for Emile; before this time men would
have been strangers to him; later on he would have been like them. Convention,
the effects of which he already perceives, has not yet made him its
slave, the passions, whose consequences he realises, have not yet stirred
his heart. He is a man; he takes an interest in his brethren; he is
a just man and he judges his peers. Now it is certain that if he judges
them rightly he will not want to change places with any one of them,
for the goal of all their anxious efforts is the result of prejudices
which he does not share, and that goal seems to him a mere dream. For
his own part, he has all he wants within his reach. How should he be
dependent on any one when he is self-sufficing and free from prejudice?
Strong arms, good health, [Footnote: I think I may fairly reckon health
and strength among the advantages he has obtained by his education,
or rather among the gifts of nature which his education has preserved
for him.] moderation, few needs, together with the means to satisfy
those needs, are his. He has been brought up in complete liberty and
servitude is the greatest ill he understands. He pities these miserable
kings, the slaves of all who obey them; he pities these false prophets
fettered by their empty fame; he pities these rich fools, martyrs to
their own pomp; he pities these ostentatious voluptuaries, who spend
their life in deadly dullness that they may seem to enjoy its pleasures.
He would pity the very foe who harmed him, for he would discern his
wretchedness beneath his cloak of spite. He would say to himself, "This
man has yielded to his desire to hurt me, and this need of his places
him at my mercy."
One step more and our goal is attained. Selfishness is a dangerous tool
though a useful one; it often wounds the hand that uses it, and it rarely
does good unmixed with evil. When Emile considers his place among men,
when he finds himself so fortunately situated, he will be tempted to
give credit to his own reason for the work of yours, and to attribute
to his own deserts what is really the result of his good fortune. He
will say to himself, "I am wise and other men are fools."
He will pity and despise them and will congratulate himself all the
more heartily; and as he knows he is happier than they, he will think
his deserts are greater. This is the fault we have most to fear, for
it is the most difficult to eradicate. If he remained in this state
of mind, he would have profited little by all our care; and if I had
to choose, I hardly know whether I would not rather choose the illusions
of prejudice than those of pride.
Great men are under no illusion with respect to their superiority; they
see it and know it, but they are none the less modest. The more they
have, the better they know what they lack. They are less vain of their
superiority over us than ashamed by the consciousness of their weakness,
and among the good things they really possess, they are too wise to
pride themselves on a gift which is none of their getting. The good
man may be proud of his virtue for it is his own, but what cause for
pride has the man of intellect? What has Racine done that he is not
Pradon, and Boileau that he is not Cotin?
The circumstances with which we are concerned are quite different. Let
us keep to the common level. I assumed that my pupil had neither surpassing
genius nor a defective understanding. I chose him of an ordinary mind
to show what education could do for man. Exceptions defy all rules.
If, therefore, as a result of my care, Emile prefers his way of living,
seeing, and feeling to that of others, he is right; but if he thinks
because of this that he is nobler and better born than they, he is wrong;
he is deceiving himself; he must be undeceived, or rather let us prevent
the mistake, lest it be too late to correct it.
Provided a man is not mad, he can be cured of any folly but vanity;
there is no cure for this but experience, if indeed there is any cure
for it at all; when it first appears we can at least prevent its further
growth. But do not on this account waste your breath on empty arguments
to prove to the youth that he is like other men and subject to the same
weaknesses. Make him feel it or he will never know it. This is another
instance of an exception to my own rules; I must voluntarily expose
my pupil to every accident which may convince him that he is no wiser
than we. The adventure with the conjurer will be repeated again and
again in different ways; I shall let flatterers take advantage of him;
if rash comrades draw him into some perilous adventure, I will let him
run the risk; if he falls into the hands of sharpers at the card-table,
I will abandon him to them as their dupe.[Footnote: Moreover our pupil
will be little tempted by this snare; he has so many amusements about
him, he has never been bored in his life, and he scarcely knows the
use of money. As children have been led by these two motives, self-interest
and vanity, rogues and courtesans use the same means to get hold of
them later. When you see their greediness encouraged by prizes and rewards,
when you find their public performances at ten years old applauded at
school or college, you see too how at twenty they will be induced to
leave their purse in a gambling hell and their health in a worse place.
You may safely wager that the sharpest boy in the class will become
the greatest gambler and debauchee. Now the means which have not been
employed in childhood have not the same effect in youth. But we must
bear in mind my constant plan and take the thing at its worst. First
I try to prevent the vice; then I assume its existence in order to correct
it.] I will let them flatter him, pluck him, and rob him; and when having
sucked him dry they turn and mock him, I will even thank them to his
face for the lessons they have been good enough to give him. The only
snares from which I will guard him with my utmost care are the wiles
of wanton women. The only precaution I shall take will be to share all
the dangers I let him run, and all the insults I let him receive. I
will bear everything in silence, without a murmur or reproach, without
a word to him, and be sure that if this wise conduct is faithfully adhered
to, what he sees me endure on his account will make more impression
on his heart than what he himself suffers.
I cannot refrain at this point from drawing attention to the sham dignity
of tutors, who foolishly pretend to be wise, who discourage their pupils
by always professing to treat them as children, and by emphasising the
difference between themselves and their scholars in everything they
do. Far from damping their youthful spirits in this fashion, spare no
effort to stimulate their courage; that they may become your equals,
treat them as such already, and if they cannot rise to your level, do
not scruple to come down to theirs without being ashamed of it. Remember
that your honour is no longer in your own keeping but in your pupil's.
Share his faults that you may correct them, bear his disgrace that you
may wipe it out; follow the example of that brave Roman who, unable
to rally his fleeing soldiers, placed himself at their head, exclaiming,
"They do not flee, they follow their captain!" Did this dishonour
him? Not so; by sacrificing his glory he increased it. The power of
duty, the beauty of virtue, compel our respect in spite of all our foolish
prejudices. If I received a blow in the course of my duties to Emile,
far from avenging it I would boast of it; and I doubt whether there
is in the whole world a man so vile as to respect me any the less on
this account.
I do not intend the pupil to suppose his master to be as ignorant, or
as liable to be led astray, as he is himself. This idea is all very
well for a child who can neither see nor compare things, who thinks
everything is within his reach, and only bestows his confidence on those
who know how to come down to his level. But a youth of Emile's age and
sense is no longer so foolish as to make this mistake, and it would
not be desirable that he should. The confidence he ought to have in
his tutor is of another kind; it should rest on the authority of reason,
and on superior knowledge, advantages which the young man is capable
of appreciating while he perceives how useful they are to himself. Long
experience has convinced him that his tutor loves him, that he is a
wise and good man who desires his happiness and knows how to procure
it. He ought to know that it is to his own advantage to listen to his
advice. But if the master lets himself be taken in like the disciple,
he will lose his right to expect deference from him, and to give him
instruction. Still less should the pupil suppose that his master is
purposely letting him fall into snares or preparing pitfalls for his
inexperience. How can we avoid these two difficulties? Choose the best
and most natural means; be frank and straightforward like himself; warn
him of the dangers to which he is exposed, point them out plainly and
sensibly, without exaggeration, without temper, without pedantic display,
and above all without giving your opinions in the form of orders, until
they have become such, and until this imperious tone is absolutely necessary.
Should he still be obstinate as he often will be, leave him free to
follow his own choice, follow him, copy his example, and that cheerfully
and frankly; if possible fling yourself into things, amuse yourself
as much as he does. If the consequences become too serious, you are
at hand to prevent them; and yet when this young man has beheld your
foresight and your kindliness, will he not be at once struck by the
one and touched by the other? All his faults are but so many hands with
which he himself provides you to restrain him at need. Now under these
circumstances the great art of the master consists in controlling events
and directing his exhortations so that he may know beforehand when the
youth will give in, and when he will refuse to do so, so that all around
him he may encompass him with the lessons of experience, and yet never
let him run too great a risk.
Warn him of his faults before he commits them; do not blame him when
once they are committed; you would only stir his self-love to mutiny.
We learn nothing from a lesson we detest. I know nothing more foolish
than the phrase, "I told you so." The best way to make him
remember what you told him is to seem to have forgotten it. Go further
than this, and when you find him ashamed of having refused to believe
you, gently smooth away the shame with kindly words. He will indeed
hold you dear when he sees how you forget yourself on his account, and
how you console him instead of reproaching him. But if you increase
his annoyance by your reproaches he will hate you, and will make it
a rule never to heed you, as if to show you that he does not agree with
you as to the value of your opinion.
The turn you give to your consolation may itself be a lesson to him,
and all the more because he does not suspect it. When you tell him,
for example, that many other people have made the same mistakes, this
is not what he was expecting; you are administering correction under
the guise of pity; for when one thinks oneself better than other people
it is a very mortifying excuse to console oneself by their example;
it means that we must realise that the most we can say is that they
are no better than we.
The time of faults is the time for fables. When we blame the guilty
under the cover of a story we instruct without offending him; and he
then understands that the story is not untrue by means of the truth
he finds in its application to himself. The child who has never been
deceived by flattery understands nothing of the fable I recently examined;
but the rash youth who has just become the dupe of a flatterer perceives
only too readily that the crow was a fool. Thus he acquires a maxim
from the fact, and the experience he would soon have forgotten is engraved
on his mind by means of the fable. There is no knowledge of morals which
cannot be acquired through our own experience or that of others. When
there is danger, instead of letting him try the experiment himself,
we have recourse to history. When the risk is comparatively slight,
it is just as well that the youth should be exposed to it; then by means
of the apologue the special cases with which the young man is now acquainted
are transformed into maxims.
It is not, however, my intention that these maxims should be explained,
nor even formulated. Nothing is so foolish and unwise as the moral at
the end of most of the fables; as if the moral was not, or ought not
to be so clear in the fable itself that the reader cannot fail to perceive
it. Why then add the moral at the end, and go deprive him of the pleasure
of discovering it for himself. The art of teaching consists in making
the pupil wish to learn. But if the pupil is to wish to learn, his mind
must not remain in such a passive state with regard to what you tell
him that there is really nothing for him to do but listen to you. The
master's vanity must always give way to the scholars; he must be able
to say, I understand, I see it, I am getting at it, I am learning something.
One of the things which makes the Pantaloon in the Italian comedies
so wearisome is the pains taken by him to explain to the audience the
platitudes they understand only too well already. We must always be
intelligible, but we need not say all there is to be said. If you talk
much you will say little, for at last no one will listen to you. What
is the sense of the four lines at the end of La Fontaine's fable of
the frog who puffed herself up. Is he afraid we should not understand
it? Does this great painter need to write the names beneath the things
he has painted? His morals, far from generalising, restrict the lesson
to some extent to the examples given, and prevent our applying them
to others. Before I put the fables of this inimitable author into the
hands of a youth, I should like to cut out all the conclusions with
which he strives to explain what he has just said so clearly and pleasantly.
If your pupil does not understand the fable without the explanation,
he will not understand it with it.
Moreover, the fables would require to be arranged in a more didactic
order, one more in agreement with the feelings and knowledge of the
young adolescent. Can you imagine anything so foolish as to follow the
mere numerical order of the book without regard to our requirements
or our opportunities. First the grasshopper, then the crow, then the
frog, then the two mules, etc. I am sick of these two mules; I remember
seeing a child who was being educated for finance; they never let him
alone, but were always insisting on the profession he was to follow;
they made him read this fable, learn it, say it, repeat it again and
again without finding in it the slightest argument against his future
calling. Not only have I never found children make any real use of the
fables they learn, but I have never found anybody who took the trouble
to see that they made such a use of them. The study claims to be instruction
in morals; but the real aim of mother and child is nothing but to set
a whole party watching the child while he recites his fables; when he
is too old to recite them and old enough to make use of them, they are
altogether forgotten. Only men, I repeat, can learn from fables, and
Emile is now old enough to begin.
I do not mean to tell you everything, so I only indicate the paths which
diverge from the right way, so that you may know how to avoid them.
If you follow the road I have marked out for you, I think your pupil
will buy his knowledge of mankind and his knowledge of himself in the
cheapest market; you will enable him to behold the tricks of fortune
without envying the lot of her favourites, and to be content with himself
without thinking himself better than others. You have begun by making
him an actor that he may learn to be one of the audience; you must continue
your task, for from the theatre things are what they seem, from the
stage they seem what they are. For the general effect we must get a
distant view, for the details we must observe more closely. But how
can a young man take part in the business of life? What right has he
to be initiated into its dark secrets? His interests are confined within
the limits of his own pleasures, he has no power over others, it is
much the same as if he had no power at all. Man is the cheapest commodity
on the market, and among all our important rights of property, the rights
of the individual are always considered last of all.
When I see the studies of young men at the period of their greatest
activity confined to purely speculative matters, while later on they
are suddenly plunged, without any sort of experience, into the world
of men and affairs, it strikes me as contrary alike to reason and to
nature, and I cease to be surprised that so few men know what to do.
How strange a choice to teach us so many useless things, while the art
of doing is never touched upon! They profess to fit us for society,
and we are taught as if each of us were to live a life of contemplation
in a solitary cell, or to discuss theories with persons whom they did
not concern. You think you are teaching your scholars how to live, and
you teach them certain bodily contortions and certain forms of words
without meaning. I, too, have taught Emile how to live; for I have taught
him to enjoy his own society and, more than that, to earn his own bread.
But this is not enough. To live in the world he must know how to get
on with other people, he must know what forces move them, he must calculate
the action and re-action of self-interest in civil society, he must
estimate the results so accurately that he will rarely fail in his undertakings,
or he will at least have tried in the best possible way. The law does
not allow young people to manage their own affairs nor to dispose of
their own property; but what would be the use of these precautions if
they never gained any experience until they were of age. They would
have gained nothing by the delay, and would have no more experience
at five-and-twenty than at fifteen. No doubt we must take precautions,
so that a youth, blinded by ignorance or misled by passion, may not
hurt himself; but at any age there are opportunities when deeds of kindness
and of care for the weak may be performed under the direction of a wise
man, on behalf of the unfortunate who need help.
Mothers and nurses grow fond of children because of the care they lavish
on them; the practice of social virtues touches the very heart with
the love of humanity; by doing good we become good; and I know no surer
way to this end. Keep your pupil busy with the good deeds that are within
his power, let the cause of the poor be his own, let him help them not
merely with his money, but with his service; let him work for them,
protect them, let his person and his time be at their disposal; let
him be their agent; he will never all his life long have a more honourable
office. How many of the oppressed, who have never got a hearing, will
obtain justice when he demands it for them with that courage and firmness
which the practice of virtue inspires; when he makes his way into the
presence of the rich and great, when he goes, if need be, to the footstool
of the king himself, to plead the cause of the wretched, the cause of
those who find all doors closed to them by their poverty, those who
are so afraid of being punished for their misfortunes that they do not
dare to complain?
But shall we make of Emile a knight-errant, a redresser of wrongs, a
paladin? Shall he thrust himself into public life, play the sage and
the defender of the laws before the great, before the magistrates, before
the king? Shall he lay petitions before the judges and plead in the
law courts? That I cannot say. The nature of things is not changed by
terms of mockery and scorn. He will do all that he knows to be useful
and good. He will do nothing more, and he knows that nothing is useful
and good for him which is unbefitting his age. He knows that his first
duty is to himself; that young men should distrust themselves; that
they should act circumspectly; that they should show respect to those
older than themselves, reticence and discretion in talking without cause,
modesty in things indifferent, but courage in well doing, and boldness
to speak the truth. Such were those illustrious Romans who, having been
admitted into public life, spent their days in bringing criminals to
justice and in protecting the innocent, without any motives beyond those
of learning, and of the furtherance of justice and of the protection
of right conduct.
Emile is not fond of noise or quarrelling, not only among men, but among
animals. [Footnote: "But what will he do if any one seeks a quarrel
with him?" My answer is that no one will ever quarrel with him,
he will never lend himself to such a thing. But, indeed, you continue,
who can be safe from a blow, or an insult from a bully, a drunkard,
a bravo, who for the joy of killing his man begins by dishonouring him?
That is another matter. The life and honour of the citizens should not
be at the mercy of a bully, a drunkard, or a bravo, and one can no more
insure oneself against such an accident than against a falling tile.
A blow given, or a lie in the teeth, if he submit to them, have social
consequences which no wisdom can prevent and no tribunal can avenge.
The weakness of the laws, therefore, so far restores a man's independence;
he is the sole magistrate and judge between the offender and himself,
the sole interpreter and administrator of natural law. Justice is his
due, and he alone can obtain it, and in such a case there is no government
on earth so foolish as to punish him for so doing. I do not say he must
fight; that is absurd; I say justice is his due, and he alone can dispense
it. If I were king, I promise you that in my kingdom no one would ever
strike a man or call him a liar, and yet I would do without all those
useless laws against duels; the means are simple and require no law
courts. However that may be, Emile knows what is due to himself in such
a case, and the example due from him to the safety of men of honour.
The strongest of men cannot prevent insult, but he can take good care
that his adversary has no opportunity to boast of that insult.] He will
never set two dogs to fight, he will never set a dog to chase a cat.
This peaceful spirit is one of the results of his education, which has
never stimulated self-love or a high opinion of himself, and so has
not encouraged him to seek his pleasure in domination and in the sufferings
of others. The sight of suffering makes him suffer too; this is a natural
feeling. It is one of the after effects of vanity that hardens a young
man and makes him take a delight in seeing the torments of a living
and feeling creature; it makes him consider himself beyond the reach
of similar sufferings through his superior wisdom or virtue. He who
is beyond the reach of vanity cannot fall into the vice which results
from vanity. So Emile loves peace. He is delighted at the sight of happiness,
and if he can help to bring it about, this is an additional reason for
sharing it. I do not assume that when he sees the unhappy he will merely
feel for them that barren and cruel pity which is content to pity the
ills it can heal. His kindness is active and teaches him much he would
have learnt far more slowly, or he would never have learnt at all, if
his heart had been harder. If he finds his comrades at strife, he tries
to reconcile them; if he sees the afflicted, he inquires as to the cause
of their sufferings; if he meets two men who hate each other, he wants
to know the reason of their enmity; if he finds one who is down-trodden
groaning under the oppression of the rich and powerful, he tries to
discover by what means he can counteract this oppression, and in the
interest he takes with regard to all these unhappy persons, the means
of removing their sufferings are never out of his sight. What use shall
we make of this disposition so that it may re-act in a way suited to
his age? Let us direct his efforts and his knowledge, and use his zeal
to increase them.
I am never weary of repeating: let all the lessons of young people take
the form of doing rather than talking; let them learn nothing from books
which they can learn from experience. How absurd to attempt to give
them practice in speaking when they have nothing to say, to expect to
make them feel, at their school desks, the vigour of the language of
passion and all the force of the arts of persuasion when they have nothing
and nobody to persuade! All the rules of rhetoric are mere waste of
words to those who do not know how to use them for their own purposes.
How does it concern a schoolboy to know how Hannibal encouraged his
soldiers to cross the Alps? If instead of these grand speeches you showed
him how to induce his prefect to give him a holiday, you may be sure
he would pay more attention to your rules.
If I wanted to teach rhetoric to a youth whose passions were as yet
undeveloped, I would draw his attention continually to things that would
stir his passions, and I would discuss with him how he should talk to
people so as to get them to regard his wishes favourably. But Emile
is not in a condition so favourable to the art of oratory. Concerned
mainly with his physical well-being, he has less need of others than
they of him; and having nothing to ask of others on his own account,
what he wants to persuade them to do does not affect him sufficiently
to awake any very strong feeling. From this it follows that his language
will be on the whole simple and literal. He usually speaks to the point
and only to make himself understood. He is not sententious, for he has
not learnt to generalise; he does not speak in figures, for he is rarely
impassioned.
Yet this is not because he is altogether cold and phlegmatic, neither
his age, his character, nor his tastes permit of this. In the fire of
adolescence the life-giving spirits, retained in the blood and distilled
again and again, inspire his young heart with a warmth which glows in
his eye, a warmth which is felt in his words and perceived in his actions.
The lofty feeling with which he is inspired gives him strength and nobility;
imbued with tender love for mankind his words betray the thoughts of
his heart; I know not how it is, but there is more charm in his open-hearted
generosity than in the artificial eloquence of others; or rather this
eloquence of his is the only true eloquence, for he has only to show
what he feels to make others share his feelings.
The more I think of it the more convinced I am that by thus translating
our kindly impulses into action, by drawing from our good or ill success
conclusions as to their cause, we shall find that there is little useful
knowledge that cannot be imparted to a youth; and that together with
such true learning as may be got at college he will learn a science
of more importance than all the rest together, the application of what
he has learned to the purposes of life. Taking such an interest in his
fellow-creatures, it is impossible that he should fail to learn very
quickly how to note and weigh their actions, their tastes, their pleasures,
and to estimate generally at their true value what may increase or diminish
the happiness of men; he should do this better than those who care for
nobody and never do anything for any one. The feelings of those who
are always occupied with their own concerns are too keenly affected
for them to judge wisely of things. They consider everything as it affects
themselves, they form their ideas of good and ill solely on their own
experience, their minds are filled with all sorts of absurd prejudices,
and anything which affects their own advantage ever so little, seems
an upheaval of the universe.
Extend self-love to others and it is transformed into virtue, a virtue
which has its root in the heart of every one of us. The less the object
of our care is directly dependent on ourselves, the less we have to
fear from the illusion of self-interest; the more general this interest
becomes, the juster it is; and the love of the human race is nothing
but the love of justice within us. If therefore we desire Emile to be
a lover of truth, if we desire that he should indeed perceive it, let
us keep him far from self-interest in all his business. The more care
he bestows upon the happiness of others the wiser and better he is,
and the fewer mistakes he will make between good and evil; but never
allow him any blind preference founded merely on personal predilection
or unfair prejudice. Why should he harm one person to serve another?
What does it matter to him who has the greater share of happiness, providing
he promotes the happiness of all? Apart from self-interest this care
for the general well-being is the first concern of the wise man, for
each of us forms part of the human race and not part of any individual
member of that race.
To prevent pity degenerating into weakness we must generalise it and
extend it to mankind. Then we only yield to it when it is in accordance
with justice, since justice is of all the virtues that which contributes
most to the common good. Reason and self-love compel us to love mankind
even more than our neighbour, and to pity the wicked is to be very cruel
to other men.
Moreover, you must bear in mind that all these means employed to project
my pupil beyond himself have also a distinct relation to himself; since
they not only cause him inward delight, but I am also endeavouring to
instruct him, while I am making him kindly disposed towards others.
First I showed the means employed, now I will show the result. What
wide prospects do I perceive unfolding themselves before his mind! What
noble feelings stifle the lesser passions in his heart! What clearness
of judgment, what accuracy in reasoning, do I see developing from the
inclinations we have cultivated, from the experience which concentrates
the desires of a great heart within the narrow bounds of possibility,
so that a man superior to others can come down to their level if he
cannot raise them to his own! True principles of justice, true types
of beauty, all moral relations between man and man, all ideas of order,
these are engraved on his understanding; he sees the right place for
everything and the causes which drive it from that place; he sees what
may do good, and what hinders it. Without having felt the passions of
mankind, he knows the illusions they produce and their mode of action.
I proceed along the path which the force of circumstances compels me
to tread, but I do not insist that my readers shall follow me. Long
ago they have made up their minds that I am wandering in the land of
chimeras, while for my part I think they are dwelling in the country
of prejudice. When I wander so far from popular beliefs I do not cease
to bear them in mind; I examine them, I consider them, not that I may
follow them or shun them, but that I may weigh them in the balance of
reason. Whenever reason compels me to abandon these popular beliefs,
I know by experience that my readers will not follow my example; I know
that they will persist in refusing to go beyond what they can see, and
that they will take the youth I am describing for the creation of my
fanciful imagination, merely because he is unlike the youths with whom
they compare him; they forget that he must needs be different, because
he has been brought up in a totally different fashion; he has been influenced
by wholly different feelings, instructed in a wholly different manner,
so that it would be far stranger if he were like your pupils than if
he were what I have supposed. He is a man of nature's making, not man's.
No wonder men find him strange.
When I began this work I took for granted nothing but what could be
observed as readily by others as by myself; for our starting-point,
the birth of man, is the same for all; but the further we go, while
I am seeking to cultivate nature and you are seeking to deprave it,
the further apart we find ourselves. At six years old my pupil was not
so very unlike yours, whom you had not yet had time to disfigure; now
there is nothing in common between them; and when they reach the age
of manhood, which is now approaching, they will show themselves utterly
different from each other, unless all my pains have been thrown away.
There may not be so very great a difference in the amount of knowledge
they possess, but there is all the difference in the world in the kind
of knowledge. You are amazed to find that the one has noble sentiments
of which the others have not the smallest germ, but remember that the
latter are already philosophers and theologians while Emile does not
even know what is meant by a philosopher and has scarcely heard the
name of God.
But if you come and tell me, "There are no such young men, young
people are not made that way; they have this passion or that, they do
this or that," it is as if you denied that a pear tree could ever
be a tall tree because the pear trees in our gardens are all dwarfs.
I beg these critics who are so ready with their blame to consider that
I am as well acquainted as they are with everything they say, that I
have probably given more thought to it, and that, as I have no private
end to serve in getting them to agree with me, I have a right to demand
that they should at least take time to find out where I am mistaken.
Let them thoroughly examine the nature of man, let them follow the earliest
growth of the heart in any given circumstances, so as to see what a
difference education may make in the individual; then let them compare
my method of education with the results I ascribe to it; and let them
tell me where my reasoning is unsound, and I shall have no answer to
give them.
It is this that makes me speak so strongly, and as I think with good
excuse: I have not pledged myself to any system, I depend as little
as possible on arguments, and I trust to what I myself have observed.
I do not base my ideas on what I have imagined, but on what I have seen.
It is true that I have not confined my observations within the walls
of any one town, nor to a single class of people; but having compared
men of every class and every nation which I have been able to observe
in the course of a life spent in this pursuit, I have discarded as artificial
what belonged to one nation and not to another, to one rank and not
to another; and I have regarded as proper to mankind what was common
to all, at any age, in any station, and in any nation whatsoever.
Now if in accordance with this method you follow from infancy the course
of a youth who has not been shaped to any special mould, one who depends
as little as possible on authority and the opinions of others, which
will he most resemble, my pupil or yours? It seems to me that this is
the question you must answer if you would know if I am mistaken.
It is not easy for a man to begin to think; but when once he has begun
he will never leave off. Once a thinker, always a thinker, and the understanding
once practised in reflection will never rest. You may therefore think
that I do too much or too little; that the human mind is not by nature
so quick to unfold; and that after having given it opportunities it
has not got, I keep it too long confined within a circle of ideas which
it ought to have outgrown.
But remember, in the first place, that when I want to train a natural
man, I do not want to make him a savage and to send him back to the
woods, but that living in the whirl of social life it is enough that
he should not let himself be carried away by the passions and prejudices
of men; let him see with his eyes and feel with his heart, let him own
no sway but that of reason. Under these conditions it is plain that
many things will strike him; the oft-recurring feelings which affect
him, the different ways of satisfying his real needs, must give him
many ideas he would not otherwise have acquired or would only have acquired
much later. The natural progress of the mind is quickened but not reversed.
The same man who would remain stupid in the forests should become wise
and reasonable in towns, if he were merely a spectator in them. Nothing
is better fitted to make one wise than the sight of follies we do not
share, and even if we share them, we still learn, provided we are not
the dupe of our follies and provided we do not bring to them the same
mistakes as the others.
Consider also that while our faculties are confined to the things of
sense, we offer scarcely any hold to the abstractions of philosophy
or to purely intellectual ideas. To attain to these we require either
to free ourselves from the body to which we are so strongly bound, or
to proceed step by step in a slow and gradual course, or else to leap
across the intervening space with a gigantic bound of which no child
is capable, one for which grown men even require many steps hewn on
purpose for them; but I find it very difficult to see how you propose
to construct such steps.
The Incomprehensible embraces all, he gives its motion to the earth,
and shapes the system of all creatures, but our eyes cannot see him
nor can our hands search him out, he evades the efforts of our senses;
we behold the work, but the workman is hidden from our eyes. It is no
small matter to know that he exists, and when we have got so far, and
when we ask. What is he? Where is he? our mind is overwhelmed, we lose
ourselves, we know not what to think.
Locke would have us begin with the study of spirits and go on to that
of bodies. This is the method of superstition, prejudice, and error;
it is not the method of nature, nor even that of well-ordered reason;
it is to learn to see by shutting our eyes. We must have studied bodies
long enough before we can form any true idea of spirits, or even suspect
that there are such beings. The contrary practice merely puts materialism
on a firmer footing.
Since our senses are the first instruments to our learning, corporeal
and sensible bodies are the only bodies we directly apprehend. The word
"spirit" has no meaning for any one who has not philosophised.
To the unlearned and to the child a spirit is merely a body. Do they
not fancy that spirits groan, speak, fight, and make noises? Now you
must own that spirits with arms and voices are very like bodies. This
is why every nation on the face of the earth, not even excepting the
Jews, have made to themselves idols. We, ourselves, with our words,
Spirit, Trinity, Persons, are for the most part quite anthropomorphic.
I admit that we are taught that God is everywhere; but we also believe
that there is air everywhere, at least in our atmosphere; and the word
Spirit meant originally nothing more than breath and wind. Once you
teach people to say what they do not understand, it is easy enough to
get them to say anything you like.
The perception of our action upon other bodies must have first induced
us to suppose that their action upon us was effected in like manner.
Thus man began by thinking that all things whose action affected him
were alive. He did not recognise the limits of their powers, and he
therefore supposed that they were boundless; as soon as he had supplied
them with bodies they became his gods. In the earliest times men went
in terror of everything and everything in nature seemed alive. The idea
of matter was developed as slowly as that of spirit, for the former
is itself an abstraction.
Thus the universe was peopled with gods like themselves. The stars,
the winds and the mountains, rivers, trees, and towns, their very dwellings,
each had its soul, its god, its life. The teraphim of Laban, the manitos
of savages, the fetishes of the negroes, every work of nature and of
man, were the first gods of mortals; polytheism was their first religion
and idolatry their earliest form of worship. The idea of one God was
beyond their grasp, till little by little they formed general ideas,
and they rose to the idea of a first cause and gave meaning to the word
"substance," which is at bottom the greatest of abstractions.
So every child who believes in God is of necessity an idolater or at
least he regards the Deity as a man, and when once the imagination has
perceived God, it is very seldom that the understanding conceives him.
Locke's order leads us into this same mistake.
Having arrived, I know not how, at the idea of substance, it is clear
that to allow of a single substance it must be assumed that this substance
is endowed with incompatible and mutually exclusive properties, such
as thought and size, one of which is by its nature divisible and the
other wholly incapable of division. Moreover it is assumed that thought
or, if you prefer it, feeling is a primitive quality inseparable from
the substance to which it belongs, that its relation to the substance
is like the relation between substance and size. Hence it is inferred
that beings who lose one of these attributes lose the substance to which
it belongs, and that death is, therefore, but a separation of substances,
and that those beings in whom the two attributes are found are composed
of the two substances to which those two qualities belong.
But consider what a gulf there still is between the idea of two substances
and that of the divine nature, between the incomprehensible idea of
the influence of our soul upon our body and the idea of the influence
of God upon every living creature. The ideas of creation, destruction,
ubiquity, eternity, almighty power, those of the divine attributes--these
are all ideas so confused and obscure that few men succeed in grasping
them; yet there is nothing obscure about them to the common people,
because they do not understand them in the least; how then should they
present themselves in full force, that is to say in all their obscurity,
to the young mind which is still occupied with the first working of
the senses, and fails to realise anything but what it handles? In vain
do the abysses of the Infinite open around us, a child does not know
the meaning of fear; his weak eyes cannot gauge their depths. To children
everything is infinite, they cannot assign limits to anything; not that
their measure is so large, but because their understanding is so small.
I have even noticed that they place the infinite rather below than above
the dimensions known to them. They judge a distance to be immense rather
by their feet than by their eyes; infinity is bounded for them, not
so much by what they can see, but how far they can go. If you talk to
them of the power of God, they will think he is nearly as strong as
their father. As their own knowledge is in everything the standard by
which they judge of what is possible, they always picture what is described
to them as rather smaller than what they know. Such are the natural
reasonings of an ignorant and feeble mind. Ajax was afraid to measure
his strength against Achilles, yet he challenged Jupiter to combat,
for he knew Achilles and did not know Jupiter. A Swiss peasant thought
himself the richest man alive; when they tried to explain to him what
a king was, he asked with pride, "Has the king got a hundred cows
on the high pastures?"
I am aware that many of my readers will be surprised to find me tracing
the course of my scholar through his early years without speaking to
him of religion. At fifteen he will not even know that he has a soul,
at eighteen even he may not be ready to learn about it. For if he learns
about it too soon, there is the risk of his never really knowing anything
about it.
If I had to depict the most heart-breaking stupidity, I would paint
a pedant teaching children the catechism; if I wanted to drive a child
crazy I would set him to explain what he learned in his catechism. You
will reply that as most of the Christian doctrines are mysteries, you
must wait, not merely till the child is a man, but till the man is dead,
before the human mind will understand those doctrines. To that I reply,
that there are mysteries which the heart of man can neither conceive
nor believe, and I see no use in teaching them to children, unless you
want to make liars of them. Moreover, I assert that to admit that there
are mysteries, you must at least realise that they are incomprehensible,
and children are not even capable of this conception! At an age when
everything is mysterious, there are no mysteries properly so-called.
"We must believe in God if we would be saved." This doctrine
wrongly understood is the root of bloodthirsty intolerance and the cause
of all the futile teaching which strikes a deadly blow at human reason
by training it to cheat itself with mere words. No doubt there is not
a moment to be lost if we would deserve eternal salvation; but if the
repetition of certain words suffices to obtain it, I do not see why
we should not people heaven with starlings and magpies as well as with
children.
The obligation of faith assumes the possibility of belief. The philosopher
who does not believe is wrong, for he misuses the reason he has cultivated,
and he is able to understand the truths he rejects. But the child who
professes the Christian faith--what does he believe? Just what he understands;
and he understands so little of what he is made to repeat that if you
tell him to say just the opposite he will be quite ready to do it. The
faith of children and the faith of many men is a matter of geography.
Will they be rewarded for having been born in Rome rather than in Mecca?
One is told that Mahomet is the prophet of God and he says, "Mahomet
is the prophet of God." The other is told that Mahomet is a rogue
and he says, "Mahomet is a rogue." Either of them would have
said just the opposite had he stood in the other's shoes. When they
are so much alike to begin with, can the one be consigned to Paradise
and the other to Hell? When a child says he believes in God, it is not
God he believes in, but Peter or James who told him that there is something
called God, and he believes it after the fashion of Euripides--
"O Jupiter, of whom I know nothing but thy name."
[Footnote: Plutarch. It is thus that the tragedy of Menalippus originally
began, but the clamour of the Athenians compelled Euripides to change
these opening lines.]
We hold that no child who dies before the age of reason will be deprived
of everlasting happiness; the Catholics believe the same of all children
who have been baptised, even though they have never heard of God. There
are, therefore, circumstances in which one can be saved without belief
in God, and these circumstances occur in the case of children or madmen
when the human mind is incapable of the operations necessary to perceive
the Godhead. The only difference I see between you and me is that you
profess that children of seven years old are able to do this and I do
not think them ready for it at fifteen. Whether I am right or wrong
depends, not on an article of the creed, but on a simple observation
in natural history.
From the same principle it is plain that any man having reached old
age without faith in God will not, therefore, be deprived of God's presence
in another life if his blindness was not wilful; and I maintain that
it is not always wilful. You admit that it is so in the case of lunatics
deprived by disease of their spiritual faculties, but not of their manhood,
and therefore still entitled to the goodness of their Creator. Why then
should we not admit it in the case of those brought up from infancy
in seclusion, those who have led the life of a savage and are without
the knowledge that comes from intercourse with other men. [Footnote:
For the natural condition of the human mind and its slow development,
cf. the first part of the Discours sur Inegalite.] For it is clearly
impossible that such a savage could ever raise his thoughts to the knowledge
of the true God. Reason tells that man should only be punished for his
wilful faults, and that invincible ignorance can never be imputed to
him as a crime. Hence it follows that in the sight of the Eternal Justice
every man who would believe if he had the necessary knowledge is counted
a believer, and that there will be no unbelievers to be punished except
those who have closed their hearts against the truth.
Let us beware of proclaiming the truth to those who cannot as yet comprehend
it, for to do so is to try to inculcate error. It would be better to
have no idea at all of the Divinity than to have mean, grotesque, harmful,
and unworthy ideas; to fail to perceive the Divine is a lesser evil
than to insult it. The worthy Plutarch says, "I would rather men
said, 'There is no such person as Plutarch,' than that they should say,
'Plutarch is unjust, envious, jealous, and such a tyrant that he demands
more than can be performed.'"
The chief harm which results from the monstrous ideas of God which are
instilled into the minds of children is that they last all their life
long, and as men they understand no more of God than they did as children.
In Switzerland I once saw a good and pious mother who was so convinced
of the truth of this maxim that she refused to teach her son religion
when he was a little child for fear lest he should be satisfied with
this crude teaching and neglect a better teaching when he reached the
age of reason. This child never heard the name of God pronounced except
with reverence and devotion, and as soon as he attempted to say the
word he was told to hold his tongue, as if the subject were too sublime
and great for him. This reticence aroused his curiosity and his self-love;
he looked forward to the time when he would know this mystery so carefully
hidden from him. The less they spoke of God to him, the less he was
himself permitted to speak of God, the more he thought about Him; this
child beheld God everywhere. What I should most dread as the result
of this unwise affectation of mystery is this: by over-stimulating the
youth's imagination you may turn his head, and make him at the best
a fanatic rather than a believer.
But we need fear nothing of the sort for Emile, who always declines
to pay attention to what is beyond his reach, and listens with profound
indifference to things he does not understand. There are so many things
of which he is accustomed to say, "That is no concern of mine,"
that one more or less makes little difference to him; and when he does
begin to perplex himself with these great matters, it is because the
natural growth of his knowledge is turning his thoughts that way.
We have seen the road by which the cultivated human mind approaches
these mysteries, and I am ready to admit that it would not attain to
them naturally, even in the bosom of society, till a much later age.
But as there are in this same society inevitable causes which hasten
the development of the passions, if we did not also hasten the development
of the knowledge which controls these passions we should indeed depart
from the path of nature and disturb her equilibrium. When we can no
longer restrain a precocious development in one direction we must promote
a corresponding development in another direction, so that the order
of nature may not be inverted, and so that things should progress together,
not separately, so that the man, complete at every moment of his life,
may never find himself at one stage in one of his faculties and at another
stage in another faculty.
What a difficulty do I see before me! A difficulty all the greater because
it depends less on actual facts than on the cowardice of those who dare
not look the difficulty in the face. Let us at least venture to state
our problem. A child should always be brought up in his father's religion;
he is always given plain proofs that this religion, whatever it may
be, is the only true religion, that all others are ridiculous and absurd.
The force of the argument depends entirely on the country in which it
is put forward. Let a Turk, who thinks Christianity so absurd at Constantinople,
come to Paris and see what they think of Mahomet. It is in matters of
religion more than in anything else that prejudice is triumphant. But
when we who profess to shake off its yoke entirely, we who refuse to
yield any homage to authority, decline to teach Emile anything which
he could not learn for himself in any country, what religion shall we
give him, to what sect shall this child of nature belong? The answer
strikes me as quite easy. We will not attach him to any sect, but we
will give him the means to choose for himself according to the right
use of his own reason.
Incedo per ignes Suppositos cineri doloso.--Horace, lib. ii. ode I.
No matter! Thus far zeal and prudence have taken the place of caution.
I hope that these guardians will not fail me now. Reader, do not fear
lest I should take precautions unworthy of a lover of truth; I shall
never forget my motto, but I distrust my own judgment all too easily.
Instead of telling you what I think myself, I will tell you the thoughts
of one whose opinions carry more weight than mine. I guarantee the truth
of the facts I am about to relate; they actually happened to the author
whose writings I am about to transcribe; it is for you to judge whether
we can draw from them any considerations bearing on the matter in hand.
I do not offer you my own idea or another's as your rule; I merely present
them for your examination.
Thirty years ago there was a young man in an Italian town; he was an
exile from his native land and found himself reduced to the depths of
poverty. He had been born a Calvinist, but the consequences of his own
folly had made him a fugitive in a strange land; he had no money and
he changed his religion for a morsel of bread. There was a hostel for
proselytes in that town to which he gained admission. The study of controversy
inspired doubts he had never felt before, and he made acquaintance with
evil hitherto unsuspected by him; he heard strange doctrines and he
met with morals still stranger to him; he beheld this evil conduct and
nearly fell a victim to it. He longed to escape, but he was locked up;
he complained, but his complaints were unheeded; at the mercy of his
tyrants, he found himself treated as a criminal because he would not
share their crimes. The anger kindled in a young and untried heart by
the first experience of violence and injustice may be realised by those
who have themselves experienced it. Tears of anger flowed from his eyes,
he was wild with rage; he prayed to heaven and to man, and his prayers
were unheard; he spoke to every one and no one listened to him. He saw
no one but the vilest servants under the control of the wretch who insulted
him, or accomplices in the same crime who laughed at his resistance
and encouraged him to follow their example. He would have been ruined
had not a worthy priest visited the hostel on some matter of business.
He found an opportunity of consulting him secretly. The priest was poor
and in need of help himself, but the victim had more need of his assistance,
and he did not hesitate to help him to escape at the risk of making
a dangerous enemy.
Having escaped from vice to return to poverty, the young man struggled
vainly against fate: for a moment he thought he had gained the victory.
At the first gleam of good fortune his woes and his protector were alike
forgotten. He was soon punished for this ingratitude; all his hopes
vanished; youth indeed was on his side, but his romantic ideas spoiled
everything. He had neither talent nor skill to make his way easily,
he could neither be commonplace nor wicked, he expected so much that
he got nothing. When he had sunk to his former poverty, when he was
without food or shelter and ready to die of hunger, he remembered his
benefactor.
He went back to him, found him, and was kindly welcomed; the sight of
him reminded the priest of a good deed he had done; such a memory always
rejoices the heart. This man was by nature humane and pitiful; he felt
the sufferings of others through his own, and his heart had not been
hardened by prosperity; in a word, the lessons of wisdom and an enlightened
virtue had reinforced his natural kindness of heart. He welcomed the
young man, found him a lodging, and recommended him; he shared with
him his living which was barely enough for two. He did more, he instructed
him, consoled him, and taught him the difficult art of bearing adversity
in patience. You prejudiced people, would you have expected to find
all this in a priest and in Italy?
This worthy priest was a poor Savoyard clergyman who had offended his
bishop by some youthful fault; he had crossed the Alps to find a position
which he could not obtain in his own country. He lacked neither wit
nor learning, and with his interesting countenance he had met with patrons
who found him a place in the household of one of the ministers, as tutor
to his son. He preferred poverty to dependence, and he did not know
how to get on with the great. He did not stay long with this minister,
and when he departed he took with him his good opinion; and as he lived
a good life and gained the hearts of everybody, he was glad to be forgiven
by his bishop and to obtain from him a small parish among the mountains,
where he might pass the rest of his life. This was the limit of his
ambition.
He was attracted by the young fugitive and he questioned him closely.
He saw that ill-fortune had already seared his heart, that scorn and
disgrace had overthrown his courage, and that his pride, transformed
into bitterness and spite, led him to see nothing in the harshness and
injustice of men but their evil disposition and the vanity of all virtue.
He had seen that religion was but a mask for selfishness, and its holy
services but a screen for hypocrisy; he had found in the subtleties
of empty disputations heaven and hell awarded as prizes for mere words;
he had seen the sublime and primitive idea of Divinity disfigured by
the vain fancies of men; and when, as he thought, faith in God required
him to renounce the reason God himself had given him, he held in equal
scorn our foolish imaginings and the object with which they are concerned.
With no knowledge of things as they are, without any idea of their origins,
he was immersed in his stubborn ignorance and utterly despised those
who thought they knew more than himself.
The neglect of all religion soon leads to the neglect of a man's duties.
The heart of this young libertine was already far on this road. Yet
his was not a bad nature, though incredulity and misery were gradually
stifling his natural disposition and dragging him down to ruin; they
were leading him into the conduct of a rascal and the morals of an atheist.
The almost inevitable evil was not actually consummated. The young man
was not ignorant, his education had not been neglected. He was at that
happy age when the pulse beats strongly and the heart is warm, but is
not yet enslaved by the madness of the senses. His heart had not lost
its elasticity. A native modesty, a timid disposition restrained him,
and prolonged for him that period during which you watch your pupil
so carefully. The hateful example of brutal depravity, of vice without
any charm, had not merely failed to quicken his imagination, it had
deadened it. For a long time disgust rather than virtue preserved his
innocence, which would only succumb to more seductive charms.
The priest saw the danger and the way of escape. He was not discouraged
by difficulties, he took a pleasure in his task; he determined to complete
it and to restore to virtue the victim he had snatched from vice. He
set about it cautiously; the beauty of the motive gave him courage and
inspired him with means worthy of his zeal. Whatever might be the result,
his pains would not be wasted. We are always successful when our sole
aim is to do good.
He began to win the confidence of the proselyte by not asking any price
for his kindness, by not intruding himself upon him, by not preaching
at him, by always coming down to his level, and treating him as an equal.
It was, so I think, a touching sight to see a serious person becoming
the comrade of a young scamp, and virtue putting up with the speech
of licence in order to triumph over it more completely. When the young
fool came to him with his silly confidences and opened his heart to
him, the priest listened and set him at his ease; without giving his
approval to what was bad, he took an interest in everything; no tactless
reproof checked his chatter or closed his heart; the pleasure which
he thought was given by his conversation increased his pleasure in telling
everything; thus he made his general confession without knowing he was
confessing anything.
After he had made a thorough study of his feelings and disposition,
the priest saw plainly that, although he was not ignorant for his age,
he had forgotten everything that he most needed to know, and that the
disgrace which fortune had brought upon him had stifled in him all real
sense of good and evil. There is a stage of degradation which robs the
soul of its life; and the inner voice cannot be heard by one whose whole
mind is bent on getting food. To protect the unlucky youth from the
moral death which threatened him, he began to revive his self-love and
his good opinion of himself. He
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