showed him a happier
future in the right use of his talents; he revived the generous warmth
of his heart by stories of the noble deeds of others; by rousing his
admiration for the doers of these deeds he revived his desire to do
like deeds himself. To draw him gradually from his idle and wandering
life, he made him copy out extracts from well-chosen books; he pretended
to want these extracts, and so nourished in him the noble feeling of
gratitude. He taught him indirectly through these books, and thus he
made him sufficiently regain his good opinion of himself so that he
would no longer think himself good for nothing, and would not make himself
despicable in his own eyes.
A trifling incident will show how this kindly man tried, unknown to
him, to raise the heart of his disciple out of its degradation, without
seeming to think of teaching. The priest was so well known for his uprightness
and his discretion, that many people preferred to entrust their alms
to him, rather than to the wealthy clergy of the town. One day some
one had given him some money to distribute among the poor, and the young
man was mean enough to ask for some of it on the score of poverty. "No,"
said he, "we are brothers, you belong to me and I must not touch
the money entrusted to me." Then he gave him the sum he had asked
for out of his own pocket. Lessons of this sort seldom fail to make
an impression on the heart of young people who are not wholly corrupt.
I am weary of speaking in the third person, and the precaution is unnecessary;
for you are well aware, my dear friend, that I myself was this unhappy
fugitive; I think I am so far removed from the disorders of my youth
that I may venture to confess them, and the hand which rescued me well
deserves that I should at least do honour to its goodness at the cost
of some slight shame.
What struck me most was to see in the private life of my worthy master,
virtue without hypocrisy, humanity without weakness, speech always plain
and straightforward, and conduct in accordance with this speech. I never
saw him trouble himself whether those whom he assisted went to vespers
or confession, whether they fasted at the appointed seasons and went
without meat; nor did he impose upon them any other like conditions,
without which you might die of hunger before you could hope for any
help from the devout.
Far from displaying before him the zeal of a new convert, I was encouraged
by these observations and I made no secret of my way of thinking, nor
did he seem to be shocked by it. Sometimes I would say to myself, he
overlooks my indifference to the religion I have adopted because he
sees I am equally indifferent to the religion in which I was brought
up; he knows that my scorn for religion is not confined to one sect.
But what could I think when I sometimes heard him give his approval
to doctrines contrary to those of the Roman Catholic Church, and apparently
having but a poor opinion of its ceremonies. I should have thought him
a Protestant in disguise if I had not beheld him so faithful to those
very customs which he seemed to value so lightly; but I knew he fulfilled
his priestly duties as carefully in private as in public, and I knew
not what to think of these apparent contradictions. Except for the fault
which had formerly brought about his disgrace, a fault which he had
only partially overcome, his life was exemplary, his conduct beyond
reproach, his conversation honest and discreet. While I lived on very
friendly terms with him, I learnt day by day to respect him more; and
when he had completely won my heart by such great kindness, I awaited
with eager curiosity the time when I should learn what was the principle
on which the uniformity of this strange life was based.
This opportunity was a long time coming. Before taking his disciple
into his confidence, he tried to get the seeds of reason and kindness
which he had sown in my heart to germinate. The most difficult fault
to overcome in me was a certain haughty misanthropy, a certain bitterness
against the rich and successful, as if their wealth and happiness had
been gained at my own expense, and as if their supposed happiness had
been unjustly taken from my own. The foolish vanity of youth, which
kicks against the pricks of humiliation, made me only too much inclined
to this angry temper; and the self-respect, which my mentor strove to
revive, led to pride, which made men still more vile in my eyes, and
only added scorn to my hatred.
Without directly attacking this pride, he prevented it from developing
into hardness of heart; and without depriving me of my self-esteem,
he made me less scornful of my neighbours. By continually drawing my
attention from the empty show, and directing it to the genuine sufferings
concealed by it, he taught me to deplore the faults of my fellows and
feel for their sufferings, to pity rather than envy them. Touched with
compassion towards human weaknesses through the profound conviction
of his own failings, he viewed all men as the victims of their own vices
and those of others; he beheld the poor groaning under the tyranny of
the rich, and the rich under the tyranny of their own prejudices. "Believe
me," said he, "our illusions, far from concealing our woes,
only increase them by giving value to what is in itself valueless, in
making us aware of all sorts of fancied privations which we should not
otherwise feel. Peace of heart consists in despising everything that
might disturb that peace; the man who clings most closely to life is
the man who can least enjoy it; and the man who most eagerly desires
happiness is always most miserable."
"What gloomy ideas!" I exclaimed bitterly. "If we must
deny ourselves everything, we might as well never have been born; and
if we must despise even happiness itself who can be happy?" "I
am," replied the priest one day, in a tone which made a great impression
on me. "You happy! So little favoured by fortune, so poor, an exile
and persecuted, you are happy! How have you contrived to be happy?"
"My child," he answered, "I will gladly tell you."
Thereupon he explained that, having heard my confessions, he would confess
to me. "I will open my whole heart to yours," he said, embracing
me. "You will see me, if not as I am, at least as I seem to myself.
When you have heard my whole confession of faith, when you really know
the condition of my heart, you will know why I think myself happy, and
if you think as I do, you will know how to be happy too. But these explanations
are not the affair of a moment, it will take time to show you all my
ideas about the lot of man and the true value of life; let us choose
a fitting time and a place where we may continue this conversation without
interruption."
I showed him how eager I was to hear him. The meeting was fixed for
the very next morning. It was summer time; we rose at daybreak. He took
me out of the town on to a high hill above the river Po, whose course
we beheld as it flowed between its fertile banks; in the distance the
landscape was crowned by the vast chain of the Alps; the beams of the
rising sun already touched the plains and cast across the fields long
shadows of trees, hillocks, and houses, and enriched with a thousand
gleams of light the fairest picture which the human eye can see. You
would have thought that nature was displaying all her splendour before
our eyes to furnish a text for our conversation. After contemplating
this scene for a space in silence, the man of peace spoke to me.
THE CREED OF A SAVOYARD PRIEST
My child, do not look to me for learned speeches or profound arguments.
I am no great philosopher, nor do I desire to be one. I have, however,
a certain amount of common-sense and a constant devotion to truth. I
have no wish to argue with you nor even to convince you; it is enough
for me to show you, in all simplicity of heart, what I really think.
Consult your own heart while I speak; that is all I ask. If I am mistaken,
I am honestly mistaken, and therefore my error will not be counted to
me as a crime; if you, too, are honestly mistaken, there is no great
harm done. If I am right, we are both endowed with reason, we have both
the same motive for listening to the voice of reason. Why should not
you think as I do?
By birth I was a peasant and poor; to till the ground was my portion;
but my parents thought it a finer thing that I should learn to get my
living as a priest and they found means to send me to college. I am
quite sure that neither my parents nor I had any idea of seeking after
what was good, useful, or true; we only sought what was wanted to get
me ordained. I learned what was taught me, I said what I was told to
say, I promised all that was required, and I became a priest. But I
soon discovered that when I promised not to be a man, I had promised
more than I could perform.
Conscience, they tell us, is the creature of prejudice, but I know from
experience that conscience persists in following the order of nature
in spite of all the laws of man. In vain is this or that forbidden;
remorse makes her voice heard but feebly when what we do is permitted
by well-ordered nature, and still more when we are doing her bidding.
My good youth, nature has not yet appealed to your senses; may you long
remain in this happy state when her voice is the voice of innocence.
Remember that to anticipate her teaching is to offend more deeply against
her than to resist her teaching; you must first learn to resist, that
you may know when to yield without wrong-doing.
From my youth up I had reverenced the married state as the first and
most sacred institution of nature. Having renounced the right to marry,
I was resolved not to profane the sanctity of marriage; for in spite
of my education and reading I had always led a simple and regular life,
and my mind had preserved the innocence of its natural instincts; these
instincts had not been obscured by worldly wisdom, while my poverty
kept me remote from the temptations dictated by the sophistry of vice.
This very resolution proved my ruin. My respect for marriage led to
the discovery of my misconduct. The scandal must be expiated; I was
arrested, suspended, and dismissed; I was the victim of my scruples
rather than of my incontinence, and I had reason to believe, from the
reproaches which accompanied my disgrace, that one can often escape
punishment by being guilty of a worse fault.
A thoughtful mind soon learns from such experiences. I found my former
ideas of justice, honesty, and every duty of man overturned by these
painful events, and day by day I was losing my hold on one or another
of the opinions I had accepted. What was left was not enough to form
a body of ideas which could stand alone, and I felt that the evidence
on which my principles rested was being weakened; at last I knew not
what to think, and I came to the same conclusion as yourself, but with
this difference: My lack of faith was the slow growth of manhood, attained
with great difficulty, and all the harder to uproot.
I was in that state of doubt and uncertainty which Descartes considers
essential to the search for truth. It is a state which cannot continue,
it is disquieting and painful; only vicious tendencies and an idle heart
can keep us in that state. My heart was not so corrupt as to delight
in it, and there is nothing which so maintains the habit of thinking
as being better pleased with oneself than with one's lot.
I pondered, therefore, on the sad fate of mortals, adrift upon this
sea of human opinions, without compass or rudder, and abandoned to their
stormy passions with no guide but an inexperienced pilot who does not
know whence he comes or whither he is going. I said to myself, "I
love truth, I seek her, and cannot find her. Show me truth and I will
hold her fast; why does she hide her face from the eager heart that
would fain worship her?"
Although I have often experienced worse sufferings, I have never led
a life so uniformly distressing as this period of unrest and anxiety,
when I wandered incessantly from one doubt to another, gaining nothing
from my prolonged meditations but uncertainty, darkness, and contradiction
with regard to the source of my being and the rule of my duties.
I cannot understand how any one can be a sceptic sincerely and on principle.
Either such philosophers do not exist or they are the most miserable
of men. Doubt with regard to what we ought to know is a condition too
violent for the human mind; it cannot long be endured; in spite of itself
the mind decides one way or another, and it prefers to be deceived rather
than to believe nothing.
My perplexity was increased by the fact that I had been brought up in
a church which decides everything and permits no doubts, so that having
rejected one article of faith I was forced to reject the rest; as I
could not accept absurd decisions, I was deprived of those which were
not absurd. When I was told to believe everything, I could believe nothing,
and I knew not where to stop.
I consulted the philosophers, I searched their books and examined their
various theories; I found them all alike proud, assertive, dogmatic,
professing, even in their so-called scepticism, to know everything,
proving nothing, scoffing at each other. This last trait, which was
common to all of them, struck me as the only point in which they were
right. Braggarts in attack, they are weaklings in defence. Weigh their
arguments, they are all destructive; count their voices, every one speaks
for himself; they are only agreed in arguing with each other. I could
find no way out of my uncertainty by listening to them.
I suppose this prodigious diversity of opinion is caused, in the first
place, by the weakness of the human intellect; and, in the second, by
pride. We have no means of measuring this vast machine, we are unable
to calculate its workings; we know neither its guiding principles nor
its final purpose; we do not know ourselves, we know neither our nature
nor the spirit that moves us; we scarcely know whether man is one or
many; we are surrounded by impenetrable mysteries. These mysteries are
beyond the region of sense, we think we can penetrate them by the light
of reason, but we fall back on our imagination. Through this imagined
world each forces a way for himself which he holds to be right; none
can tell whether his path will lead him to the goal. Yet we long to
know and understand it all. The one thing we do not know is the limit
of the knowable. We prefer to trust to chance and to believe what is
not true, rather than to own that not one of us can see what really
is. A fragment of some vast whole whose bounds are beyond our gaze,
a fragment abandoned by its Creator to our foolish quarrels, we are
vain enough to want to determine the nature of that whole and our own
relations with regard to it.
If the philosophers were in a position to declare the truth, which of
them would care to do so? Every one of them knows that his own system
rests on no surer foundations than the rest, but he maintains it because
it is his own. There is not one of them who, if he chanced to discover
the difference between truth and falsehood, would not prefer his own
lie to the truth which another had discovered. Where is the philosopher
who would not deceive the whole world for his own glory? If he can rise
above the crowd, if he can excel his rivals, what more does he want?
Among believers he is an atheist; among atheists he would be a believer.
The first thing I learned from these considerations was to restrict
my inquiries to what directly concerned myself, to rest in profound
ignorance of everything else, and not even to trouble myself to doubt
anything beyond what I required to know.
I also realised that the philosophers, far from ridding me of my vain
doubts, only multiplied the doubts that tormented me and failed to remove
any one of them. So I chose another guide and said, "Let me follow
the Inner Light; it will not lead me so far astray as others have done,
or if it does it will be my own fault, and I shall not go so far wrong
if I follow my own illusions as if I trusted to their deceits."
I then went over in my mind the various opinions which I had held in
the course of my life, and I saw that although no one of them was plain
enough to gain immediate belief, some were more probable than others,
and my inward consent was given or withheld in proportion to this improbability.
Having discovered this, I made an unprejudiced comparison of all these
different ideas, and I perceived that the first and most general of
them was also the simplest and the most reasonable, and that it would
have been accepted by every one if only it had been last instead of
first. Imagine all your philosophers, ancient and modern, having exhausted
their strange systems of force, chance, fate, necessity, atoms, a living
world, animated matter, and every variety of materialism. Then comes
the illustrious Clarke who gives light to the world and proclaims the
Being of beings and the Giver of things. What universal admiration,
what unanimous applause would have greeted this new system--a system
so great, so illuminating, and so simple. Other systems are full of
absurdities; this system seems to me to contain fewer things which are
beyond the understanding of the human mind. I said to myself, "Every
system has its insoluble problems, for the finite mind of man is too
small to deal with them; these difficulties are therefore no final arguments,
against any system. But what a difference there is between the direct
evidence on which these systems are based! Should we not prefer that
theory which alone explains all the facts, when it is no more difficult
than the rest?"
Bearing thus within my heart the love of truth as my only philosophy,
and as my only method a clear and simple rule which dispensed with the
need for vain and subtle arguments, I returned with the help of this
rule to the examination of such knowledge as concerned myself; I was
resolved to admit as self-evident all that I could not honestly refuse
to believe, and to admit as true all that seemed to follow directly
from this; all the rest I determined to leave undecided, neither accepting
nor rejecting it, nor yet troubling myself to clear up difficulties
which did not lead to any practical ends.
But who am I? What right have I to decide? What is it that determines
my judgments? If they are inevitable, if they are the results of the
impressions I receive, I am wasting my strength in such inquiries; they
would be made or not without any interference of mine. I must therefore
first turn my eyes upon myself to acquaint myself with the instrument
I desire to use, and to discover how far it is reliable.
I exist, and I have senses through which I receive impressions. This
is the first truth that strikes me and I am forced to accept it. Have
I any independent knowledge of my existence, or am I only aware of it
through my sensations? This is my first difficulty, and so far I cannot
solve it. For I continually experience sensations, either directly or
indirectly through memory, so how can I know if the feeling of self
is something beyond these sensations or if it can exist independently
of them?
My sensations take place in myself, for they make me aware of my own
existence; but their cause is outside me, for they affect me whether
I have any reason for them or not, and they are produced or destroyed
independently of me. So I clearly perceive that my sensation, which
is within me, and its cause or its object, which is outside me, are
different things.
Thus, not only do I exist, but other entities exist also, that is to
say, the objects of my sensations; and even if these objects are merely
ideas, still these ideas are not me.
But everything outside myself, everything which acts upon my senses,
I call matter, and all the particles of matter which I suppose to be
united into separate entities I call bodies. Thus all the disputes of
the idealists and the realists have no meaning for me; their distinctions
between the appearance and the reality of bodies are wholly fanciful.
I am now as convinced of the existence of the universe as of my own.
I next consider the objects of my sensations, and I find that I have
the power of comparing them, so I perceive that I am endowed with an
active force of which I was not previously aware.
To perceive is to feel; to compare is to judge; to judge and to feel
are not the same. Through sensation objects present themselves to me
separately and singly as they are in nature; by comparing them I rearrange
them, I shift them so to speak, I place one upon another to decide whether
they are alike or different, or more generally to find out their relations.
To my mind, the distinctive faculty of an active or intelligent being
is the power of understanding this word "is." I seek in vain
in the merely sensitive entity that intelligent force which compares
and judges; I can find no trace of it in its nature. This passive entity
will be aware of each object separately, it will even be aware of the
whole formed by the two together, but having no power to place them
side by side it can never compare them, it can never form a judgment
with regard to them.
To see two things at once is not to see their relations nor to judge
of their differences; to perceive several objects, one beyond the other,
is not to relate them. I may have at the same moment an idea of a big
stick and a little stick without comparing them, without judging that
one is less than the other, just as I can see my whole hand without
counting my fingers. [Footnote: M. de le Cordamines' narratives tell
of a people who only know how to count up to three. Yet the men of this
nation, having hands, have often seen their fingers without learning
to count up to five.] These comparative ideas, 'greater', 'smaller',
together with number ideas of 'one', 'two', etc. are certainly not sensations,
although my mind only produces them when my sensations occur.
We are told that a sensitive being distinguishes sensations from each
other by the inherent differences in the sensations; this requires explanation.
When the sensations are different, the sensitive being distinguishes
them by their differences; when they are alike, he distinguishes them
because he is aware of them one beyond the other. Otherwise, how could
he distinguish between two equal objects simultaneously experienced?
He would necessarily confound the two objects and take them for one
object, especially under a system which professed that the representative
sensations of space have no extension.
When we become aware of the two sensations to be compared, their impression
is made, each object is perceived, both are perceived, but for all that
their relation is not perceived. If the judgment of this relation were
merely a sensation, and came to me solely from the object itself, my
judgments would never be mistaken, for it is never untrue that I feel
what I feel.
Why then am I mistaken as to the relation between these two sticks,
especially when they are not parallel? Why, for example, do I say the
small stick is a third of the large, when it is only a quarter? Why
is the picture, which is the sensation, unlike its model which is the
object? It is because I am active when I judge, because the operation
of comparison is at fault; because my understanding, which judges of
relations, mingles its errors with the truth of sensations, which only
reveal to me things.
Add to this a consideration which will, I feel sure, appeal to you when
you have thought about it: it is this--If we were purely passive in
the use of our senses, there would be no communication between them;
it would be impossible to know that the body we are touching and the
thing we are looking at is the same. Either we should never perceive
anything outside ourselves, or there would be for us five substances
perceptible by the senses, whose identity we should have no means of
perceiving.
This power of my mind which brings my sensations together and compares
them may be called by any name; let it be called attention, meditation,
reflection, or what you will; it is still true that it is in me and
not in things, that it is I alone who produce it, though I only produce
it when I receive an impression from things. Though I am compelled to
feel or not to feel, I am free to examine more or less what I feel.
Being now, so to speak, sure of myself, I begin to look at things outside
myself, and I behold myself with a sort of shudder flung at random into
this vast universe, plunged as it were into the vast number of entities,
knowing nothing of what they are in themselves or in relation to me.
I study them, I observe them; and the first object which suggests itself
for comparison with them is myself.
All that I perceive through the senses is matter, and I deduce all the
essential properties of matter from the sensible qualities which make
me perceive it, qualities which are inseparable from it. I see it sometimes
in motion, sometimes at rest, [Footnote: This repose is, if you prefer
it, merely relative; but as we perceive more or less of motion, we may
plainly conceive one of two extremes, which is rest; and we conceive
it so clearly that we are even disposed to take for absolute rest what
is only relative. But it is not true that motion is of the essence of
matter, if matter may be conceived of as at rest.] hence I infer that
neither motion nor rest is essential to it, but motion, being an action,
is the result of a cause of which rest is only the absence. When, therefore,
there is nothing acting upon matter it does not move, and for the very
reason that rest and motion are indifferent to it, its natural state
is a state of rest.
I perceive two sorts of motions of bodies, acquired motion and spontaneous
or voluntary motion. In the first the cause is external to the body
moved, in the second it is within. I shall not conclude from that that
the motion, say of a watch, is spontaneous, for if no external cause
operated upon the spring it would run down and the watch would cease
to go. For the same reason I should not admit that the movements of
fluids are spontaneous, neither should I attribute spontaneous motion
to fire which causes their fluidity. [Footnote: Chemists regard phlogiston
or the element of fire as diffused, motionless, and stagnant in the
compounds of which it forms part, until external forces set it free,
collect it and set it in motion, and change it into fire.]
You ask me if the movements of animals are spontaneous; my answer is,
"I cannot tell," but analogy points that way. You ask me again,
how do I know that there are spontaneous movements? I tell you, "I
know it because I feel them." I want to move my arm and I move
it without any other immediate cause of the movement but my own will.
In vain would any one try to argue me out of this feeling, it is stronger
than any proofs; you might as well try to convince me that I do not
exist.
If there were no spontaneity in men's actions, nor in anything that
happens on this earth, it would be all the more difficult to imagine
a first cause for all motion. For my own part, I feel myself so thoroughly
convinced that the natural state of matter is a state of rest, and that
it has no power of action in itself, that when I see a body in motion
I at once assume that it is either a living body or that this motion
has been imparted to it. My mind declines to accept in any way the idea
of inorganic matter moving of its own accord, or giving rise to any
action.
Yet this visible universe consists of matter, matter diffused and dead,
[Footnote: I have tried hard to grasp the idea of a living molecule,
but in vain. The idea of matter feeling without any senses seems to
me unintelligible and self-contradictory. To accept or reject this idea
one must first understand it, and I confess that so far I have not succeeded.]
matter which has none of the cohesion, the organisation, the common
feeling of the parts of a living body, for it is certain that we who
are parts have no consciousness of the whole. This same universe is
in motion, and in its movements, ordered, uniform, and subject to fixed
laws, it has none of that freedom which appears in the spontaneous movements
of men and animals. So the world is not some huge animal which moves
of its own accord; its movements are therefore due to some external
cause, a cause which I cannot perceive, but the inner voice makes this
cause so apparent to me that I cannot watch the course of the sun without
imagining a force which drives it, and when the earth revolves I think
I see the hand that sets it in motion.
If I must accept general laws whose essential relation to matter is
unperceived by me, how much further have I got? These laws, not being
real things, not being substances, have therefore some other basis unknown
to me. Experiment and observation have acquainted us with the laws of
motion; these laws determine the results without showing their causes;
they are quite inadequate to explain the system of the world and the
course of the universe. With the help of dice Descartes made heaven
and earth; but he could not set his dice in motion, nor start the action
of his centrifugal force without the help of rotation. Newton discovered
the law of gravitation; but gravitation alone would soon reduce the
universe to a motionless mass; he was compelled to add a projectile
force to account for the elliptical course of the celestial bodies;
let Newton show us the hand that launched the planets in the tangent
of their orbits.
The first causes of motion are not to be found in matter; matter receives
and transmits motion, but does not produce it. The more I observe the
action and reaction of the forces of nature playing on one another,
the more I see that we must always go back from one effect to another,
till we arrive at a first cause in some will; for to assume an infinite
succession of causes is to assume that there is no first cause. In a
word, no motion which is not caused by another motion can take place,
except by a spontaneous, voluntary action; inanimate bodies have no
action but motion, and there is no real action without will. This is
my first principle. I believe, therefore, that there is a will which
sets the universe in motion and gives life to nature. This is my first
dogma, or the first article of my creed.
How does a will produce a physical and corporeal action? I cannot tell,
but I perceive that it does so in myself; I will to do something and
I do it; I will to move my body and it moves, but if an inanimate body,
when at rest, should begin to move itself, the thing is incomprehensible
and without precedent. The will is known to me in its action, not in
its nature. I know this will as a cause of motion, but to conceive of
matter as producing motion is clearly to conceive of an effect without
a cause, which is not to conceive at all.
It is no more possible for me to conceive how my will moves my body
than to conceive how my sensations affect my mind. I do not even know
why one of these mysteries has seemed less inexplicable than the other.
For my own part, whether I am active or passive, the means of union
of the two substances seem to me absolutely incomprehensible. It is
very strange that people make this very incomprehensibility a step towards
the compounding of the two substances, as if operations so different
in kind were more easily explained in one case than in two.
The doctrine I have just laid down is indeed obscure; but at least it
suggests a meaning and there is nothing in it repugnant to reason or
experience; can we say as much of materialism? Is it not plain that
if motion is essential to matter it would be inseparable from it, it
would always be present in it in the same degree, always present in
every particle of matter, always the same in each particle of matter,
it would not be capable of transmission, it could neither increase nor
diminish, nor could we ever conceive of matter at rest. When you tell
me that motion is not essential to matter but necessary to it, you try
to cheat me with words which would be easier to refute if there was
a little more sense in them. For either the motion of matter arises
from the matter itself and is therefore essential to it; or it arises
from an external cause and is not necessary to the matter, because the
motive cause acts upon it; we have got back to our original difficulty.
The chief source of human error is to be found in general and abstract
ideas; the jargon of metaphysics has never led to the discovery of any
single truth, and it has filled philosophy with absurdities of which
we are ashamed as soon as we strip them of their long words. Tell me,
my friend, when they talk to you of a blind force diffused throughout
nature, do they present any real idea to your mind? They think they
are saying something by these vague expressions--universal force, essential
motion--but they are saying nothing at all. The idea of motion is nothing
more than the idea of transference from place to place; there is no
motion without direction; for no individual can move all ways at once.
In what direction then does matter move of necessity? Has the whole
body of matter a uniform motion, or has each atom its own motion? According
to the first idea the whole universe must form a solid and indivisible
mass; according to the second it can only form a diffused and incoherent
fluid, which would make the union of any two atoms impossible. What
direction shall be taken by this motion common to all matter? Shall
it be in a straight line, in a circle, or from above downwards, to the
right or to the left? If each molecule has its own direction, what are
the causes of all these directions and all these differences? If every
molecule or atom only revolved on its own axis, nothing would ever leave
its place and there would be no transmitted motion, and even then this
circular movement would require to follow some direction. To set matter
in motion by an abstraction is to utter words without meaning, and to
attribute to matter a given direction is to assume a determining cause.
The more examples I take, the more causes I have to explain, without
ever finding a common agent which controls them. Far from being able
to picture to myself an entire absence of order in the fortuitous concurrence
of elements, I cannot even imagine such a strife, and the chaos of the
universe is less conceivable to me than its harmony. I can understand
that the mechanism of the universe may not be intelligible to the human
mind, but when a man sets to work to explain it, he must say what men
can understand.
If matter in motion points me to a will, matter in motion according
to fixed laws points me to an intelligence; that is the second article
of my creed. To act, to compare, to choose, are the operations of an
active, thinking being; so this being exists. Where do you find him
existing, you will say? Not merely in the revolving heavens, nor in
the sun which gives us light, not in myself alone, but in the sheep
that grazes, the bird that flies, the stone that falls, and the leaf
blown by the wind.
I judge of the order of the world, although I know nothing of its purpose,
for to judge of this order it is enough for me to compare the parts
one with another, to study their co-operation, their relations, and
to observe their united action. I know not why the universe exists,
but I see continually how it is changed; I never fail to perceive the
close connection by which the entities of which it consists lend their
aid one to another. I am like a man who sees the works of a watch for
the first time; he is never weary of admiring the mechanism, though
he does not know the use of the instrument and has never seen its face.
I do not know what this is for, says he, but I see that each part of
it is fitted to the rest, I admire the workman in the details of his
work, and I am quite certain that all these wheels only work together
in this fashion for some common end which I cannot perceive.
Let us compare the special ends, the means, the ordered relations of
every kind, then let us listen to the inner voice of feeling; what healthy
mind can reject its evidence? Unless the eyes are blinded by prejudices,
can they fail to see that the visible order of the universe proclaims
a supreme intelligence? What sophisms must be brought together before
we fail to understand the harmony of existence and the wonderful co-operation
of every part for the maintenance of the rest? Say what you will of
combinations and probabilities; what do you gain by reducing me to silence
if you cannot gain my consent? And how can you rob me of the spontaneous
feeling which, in spite of myself, continually gives you the lie? If
organised bodies had come together fortuitously in all sorts of ways
before assuming settled forms, if stomachs are made without mouths,
feet without heads, hands without arms, imperfect organs of every kind
which died because they could not preserve their life, why do none of
these imperfect attempts now meet our eyes; why has nature at length
prescribed laws to herself which she did not at first recognise? I must
not be surprised if that which is possible should happen, and if the
improbability of the event is compensated for by the number of the attempts.
I grant this; yet if any one told me that printed characters scattered
broadcast had produced the Aeneid all complete, I would not condescend
to take a single step to verify this falsehood. You will tell me I am
forgetting the multitude of attempts. But how many such attempts must
I assume to bring the combination within the bounds of probability?
For my own part the only possible assumption is that the chances are
infinity to one that the product is not the work of chance. In addition
to this, chance combinations yield nothing but products of the same
nature as the elements combined, so that life and organisation will
not be produced by a flow of atoms, and a chemist when making his compounds
will never give them thought and feeling in his crucible. [Footnote:
Could one believe, if one had not seen it, that human absurdity could
go so far? Amatus Lusitanus asserts that he saw a little man an inch
long enclosed in a glass, which Julius Camillus, like a second Prometheus,
had made by alchemy. Paracelsis (De natura rerum) teaches the method
of making these tiny men, and he maintains that the pygmies, fauns,
satyrs, and nymphs have been made by chemistry. Indeed I cannot see
that there is anything more to be done, to establish the possibility
of these facts, unless it is to assert that organic matter resists the
heat of fire and that its molecules can preserve their life in the hottest
furnace.]
I was surprised and almost shocked when I read Neuwentit. How could
this man desire to make a book out of the wonders of nature, wonders
which show the wisdom of the author of nature? His book would have been
as large as the world itself before he had exhausted his subject, and
as soon as we attempt to give details, that greatest wonder of all,
the concord and harmony of the whole, escapes us. The mere generation
of living organic bodies is the despair of the human mind; the insurmountable
barrier raised by nature between the various species, so that they should
not mix with one another, is the clearest proof of her intention. She
is not content to have established order, she has taken adequate measures
to prevent the disturbance of that order.
There is not a being in the universe which may not be regarded as in
some respects the common centre of all, around which they are grouped,
so that they are all reciprocally end and means in relation to each
other. The mind is confused and lost amid these innumerable relations,
not one of which is itself confused or lost in the crowd. What absurd
assumptions are required to deduce all this harmony from the blind mechanism
of matter set in motion by chance! In vain do those who deny the unity
of intention manifested in the relations of all the parts of this great
whole, in vain do they conceal their nonsense under abstractions, co-ordinations,
general principles, symbolic expressions; whatever they do I find it
impossible to conceive of a system of entities so firmly ordered unless
I believe in an intelligence that orders them. It is not in my power
to believe that passive and dead matter can have brought forth living
and feeling beings, that blind chance has brought forth intelligent
beings, that that which does not think has brought forth thinking beings.
I believe, therefore, that the world is governed by a wise and powerful
will; I see it or rather I feel it, and it is a great thing to know
this. But has this same world always existed, or has it been created?
Is there one source of all things? Are there two or many? What is their
nature? I know not; and what concern is it of mine? When these things
become of importance to me I will try to learn them; till then I abjure
these idle speculations, which may trouble my peace, but cannot affect
my conduct nor be comprehended by my reason.
Recollect that I am not preaching my own opinion but explaining it.
Whether matter is eternal or created, whether its origin is passive
or not, it is still certain that the whole is one, and that it proclaims
a single intelligence; for I see nothing that is not part of the same
ordered system, nothing which does not co-operate to the same end, namely,
the conservation of all within the established order. This being who
wills and can perform his will, this being active through his own power,
this being, whoever he may be, who moves the universe and orders all
things, is what I call God. To this name I add the ideas of intelligence,
power, will, which I have brought together, and that of kindness which
is their necessary consequence; but for all this I know no more of the
being to which I ascribe them. He hides himself alike from my senses
and my understanding; the more I think of him, the more perplexed I
am; I know full well that he exists, and that he exists of himself alone;
I know that my existence depends on his, and that everything I know
depends upon him also. I see God everywhere in his works; I feel him
within myself; I behold him all around me; but if I try to ponder him
himself, if I try to find out where he is, what he is, what is his substance,
he escapes me and my troubled spirit finds nothing.
Convinced of my unfitness, I shall never argue about the nature of God
unless I am driven to it by the feeling of his relations with myself.
Such reasonings are always rash; a wise man should venture on them with
trembling, he should be certain that he can never sound their abysses;
for the most insolent attitude towards God is not to abstain from thinking
of him, but to think evil of him.
After the discovery of such of his attributes as enable me to conceive
of his existence, I return to myself, and I try to discover what is
my place in the order of things which he governs, and I can myself examine.
At once, and beyond possibility of doubt, I discover my species; for
by my own will and the instruments I can control to carry out my will,
I have more power to act upon all bodies about me, either to make use
of or to avoid their action at my pleasure, than any of them has power
to act upon me against my will by mere physical impulsion; and through
my intelligence I am the only one who can examine all the rest. What
being here below, except man, can observe others, measure, calculate,
forecast their motions, their effects, and unite, so to speak, the feeling
of a common existence with that of his individual existence? What is
there so absurd in the thought that all things are made for me, when
I alone can relate all things to myself?
It is true, therefore, that man is lord of the earth on which he dwells;
for not only does he tame all the beasts, not only does he control its
elements through his industry; but he alone knows how to control it;
by contemplation he takes possession of the stars which he cannot approach.
Show me any other creature on earth who can make a fire and who can
behold with admiration the sun. What! can I observe and know all creatures
and their relations; can I feel what is meant by order, beauty, and
virtue; can I consider the universe and raise myself towards the hand
that guides it; can I love good and perform it; and should I then liken
myself to the beasts? Wretched soul, it is your gloomy philosophy which
makes you like the beasts; or rather in vain do you seek to degrade
yourself; your genius belies your principles, your kindly heart belies
your doctrines, and even the abuse of your powers proves their excellence
in your own despite.
For myself, I am not pledged to the support of any system. I am a plain
and honest man, one who is not carried away by party spirit, one who
has no ambition to be head of a sect; I am content with the place where
God has set me; I see nothing, next to God himself, which is better
than my species; and if I had to choose my place in the order of creation,
what more could I choose than to be a man!
I am not puffed up by this thought, I am deeply moved by it; for this
state was no choice of mine, it was not due to the deserts of a creature
who as yet did not exist. Can I behold myself thus distinguished without
congratulating myself on this post of honour, without blessing the hand
which bestowed it? The first return to self has given birth to a feeling
of gratitude and thankfulness to the author of my species, and this
feeling calls forth my first homage to the beneficent Godhead. I worship
his Almighty power and my heart acknowledges his mercies. Is it not
a natural consequence of our self-love to honour our protector and to
love our benefactor?
But when, in my desire to discover my own place within my species, I
consider its different ranks and the men who fill them, where am I now?
What a sight meets my eyes! Where is now the order I perceived? Nature
showed me a scene of harmony and proportion; the human race shows me
nothing but confusion and disorder. The elements agree together; men
are in a state of chaos. The beasts are happy; their king alone is wretched.
O Wisdom, where are thy laws? O Providence, is this thy rule over the
world? Merciful God, where is thy Power? I behold the earth, and there
is evil upon it.
Would you believe it, dear friend, from these gloomy thoughts and apparent
contradictions, there was shaped in my mind the sublime idea of the
soul, which all my seeking had hitherto failed to discover? While I
meditated upon man's nature, I seemed to discover two distinct principles
in it; one of them raised him to the study of the eternal truths, to
the love of justice, and of true morality, to the regions of the world
of thought, which the wise delight to contemplate; the other led him
downwards to himself, made him the slave of his senses, of the passions
which are their instruments, and thus opposed everything suggested to
him by the former principle. When I felt myself carried away, distracted
by these conflicting motives, I said, No; man is not one; I will and
I will not; I feel myself at once a slave and a free man; I perceive
what is right, I love it, and I do what is wrong; I am active when I
listen to the voice of reason; I am passive when I am carried away by
my passions; and when I yield, my worst suffering is the knowledge that
I might have resisted.
Young man, hear me with confidence. I will always be honest with you.
If conscience is the creature of prejudice, I am certainly wrong, and
there is no such thing as a proof of morality; but if to put oneself
first is an inclination natural to man, and if the first sentiment of
justice is moreover inborn in the human heart, let those who say man
is a simple creature remove these contradictions and I will grant that
there is but one substance.
You will note that by this term 'substance' I understand generally the
being endowed with some primitive quality, apart from all special and
secondary modifications. If then all the primitive qualities which are
known to us can be united in one and the same being, we should only
acknowledge one substance; but if there are qualities which are mutually
exclusive, there are as many different substances as there are such
exclusions. You will think this over; for my own part, whatever Locke
may say, it is enough for me to recognise matter as having merely extension
and divisibility to convince myself that it cannot think, and if a philosopher
tells me that trees feel and rocks think [Footnote: It seems to me that
modern philosophy, far from saying that rocks think, has discovered
that men do not think. It perceives nothing more in nature than sensitive
beings; and the only difference it finds between a man and a stone is
that a man is a sensitive being which experiences sensations, and a
stone is a sensitive being which does not experience sensations. But
if it is true that all matter feels, where shall I find the sensitive
unit, the individual ego? Shall it be in each molecule of matter or
in bodies as aggregates of molecules? Shall I place this unity in fluids
and solids alike, in compounds and in elements? You tell me nature consists
of individuals. But what are these individuals? Is that stone an individual
or an aggregate of individuals? Is it a single sensitive being, or are
there as many beings in it as there are grains of sand? If every elementary
atom is a sensitive being, how shall I conceive of that intimate communication
by which one feels within the other, so that their two egos are blended
in one? Attraction may be a law of nature whose mystery is unknown to
us; but at least we conceive that there is nothing in attraction acting
in proportion to mass which is contrary to extension and divisibility.
Can you conceive of sensation in the same way? The sensitive parts have
extension, but the sensitive being is one and indivisible; he cannot
be cut in two, he is a whole or he is nothing; therefore the sensitive
being is not a material body. I know not how our materialists understand
it, but it seems to me that the same difficulties which have led them
to reject thought, should have made them also reject feeling; and I
see no reason why, when the first step has been taken, they should not
take the second too; what more would it cost them? Since they are certain
they do not think, why do they dare to affirm that they feel?] in vain
will he perplex me with his cunning arguments; I merely regard him as
a dishonest sophist, who prefers to say that stones have feeling rather
than that men have souls.
Suppose a deaf man denies the existence of sounds because he has never
heard them. I put before his eyes a stringed instrument and cause it
to sound in unison by means of another instrument concealed from him;
the deaf man sees the chord vibrate. I tell him, "The sound makes
it do that." "Not at all," says he, "the string
itself is the cause of the vibration; to vibrate in that way is a quality
common to all bodies." "Then show me this vibration in other
bodies," I answer, "or at least show me its cause in this
string." "I cannot," replies the deaf man; "but
because I do not understand how that string vibrates why should I try
to explain it by means of your sounds, of which I have not the least
idea? It is explaining one obscure fact by means of a cause still more
obscure. Make me perceive your sounds; or I say there are no such things."
The more I consider thought and the nature of the human mind, the more
likeness I find between the arguments of the materialists and those
of the deaf man. Indeed, they are deaf to the inner voice which cries
aloud to them, in a tone which can hardly be mistaken. A machine does
not think, there is neither movement nor form which can produce reflection;
something within thee tries to break the bands which confine it; space
is not thy measure, the whole universe does not suffice to contain thee;
thy sentiments, thy desires, thy anxiety, thy pride itself, have another
origin than this small body in which thou art imprisoned.
No material creature is in itself active, and I am active. In vain do
you argue this point with me; I feel it, and it is this feeling which
speaks to me more forcibly than the reason which disputes it. I have
a body which is acted upon by other bodies, and it acts in turn upon
them; there is no doubt about this reciprocal action; but my will is
independent of my senses; I consent or I resist; I yield or I win the
victory, and I know very well in myself when I have done what I wanted
and when I have merely given way to my passions. I have always the power
to will, but not always the strength to do what I will. When I yield
to temptation I surrender myself to the action of external objects.
When I blame myself for this weakness, I listen to my own will alone;
I am a slave in my vices, a free man in my remorse; the feeling of freedom
is never effaced in me but when I myself do wrong, and when I at length
prevent the voice of the soul from protesting against the authority
of the body.
I am only aware of will through the consciousness of my own will, and
intelligence is no better known to me. When you ask me what is the cause
which determines my will, it is my turn to ask what cause determines
my judgment; for it is plain that these two causes are but one; and
if you understand clearly that man is active in his judgments, that
his intelligence is only the power to compare and judge, you will see
that his freedom is only a similar power or one derived from this; he
chooses between good and evil as he judges between truth and falsehood;
if his judgment is at fault, he chooses amiss. What then is the cause
that determines his will? It is his judgment. And what is the cause
that determines his judgment? It is his intelligence, his power of judging;
the determining cause is in himself. Beyond that, I understand nothing.
No doubt I am not free not to desire my own welfare, I am not free to
desire my own hurt; but my freedom consists in this very thing, that
I can will what is for my own good, or what I esteem as such, without
any external compulsion. Does it follow that I am not my own master
because I cannot be other than myself?
The motive power of all action is in the will of a free creature; we
can go no farther. It is not the word freedom that is meaningless, but
the word necessity. To suppose some action which is not the effect of
an active motive power is indeed to suppose effects without cause, to
reason in a vicious circle. Either there is no original impulse, or
every original impulse has no antecedent cause, and there is no will
properly so-called without freedom. Man is therefore free to act, and
as such he is animated by an immaterial substance; that is the third
article of my creed. From these three you will easily deduce the rest,
so that I need not enumerate them.
If man is at once active and free, he acts of his own accord; what he
does freely is no part of the system marked out by Providence and it
cannot be imputed to Providence. Providence does not will the evil that
man does when he misuses the freedom given to him; neither does Providence
prevent him doing it, either because the wrong done by so feeble a creature
is as nothing in its eyes, or because it could not prevent it without
doing a greater wrong and degrading his nature. Providence has made
him free that he may choose the good and refuse the evil. It has made
him capable of this choice if he uses rightly the faculties bestowed
upon him, but it has so strictly limited his powers that the misuse
of his freedom cannot disturb the general order. The evil that man does
reacts upon himself without affecting the system of the world, without
preventing the preservation of the human species in spite of itself.
To complain that God does not prevent us from doing wrong is to complain
because he has made man of so excellent a nature, that he has endowed
his actions with that morality by which they are ennobled, that he has
made virtue man's birthright. Supreme happiness consists in self-content;
that we may gain this self-content we are placed upon this earth and
endowed with freedom, we are tempted by our passions and restrained
by conscience. What more could divine power itself have done on our
behalf? Could it have made our nature a contradiction, and have given
the prize of well-doing to one who was incapable of evil? To prevent
a man from wickedness, should Providence have restricted him to instinct
and made him a fool? Not so, O God of my soul, I will never reproach
thee that thou hast created me in thine own image, that I may be free
and good and happy like my Maker!
It is the abuse of our powers that makes us unhappy and wicked. Our
cares, our sorrows, our sufferings are of our own making. Moral ills
are undoubtedly the work of man, and physical ills would be nothing
but for our vices which have made us liable to them. Has not nature
made us feel our needs as a means to our preservation! Is not bodily
suffering a sign that the machine is out of order and needs attention?
Death.... Do not the wicked poison their own life and ours? Who would
wish to live for ever? Death is the cure for the evils you bring upon
yourself; nature would not have you suffer perpetually. How few sufferings
are felt by man living in a state of primitive simplicity! His life
is almost entirely free from suffering and from passion; he neither
fears nor feels death; if he feels it, his sufferings make him desire
it; henceforth it is no evil in his eyes. If we were but content to
be ourselves we should have no cause to complain of our lot; but in
the search for an imaginary good we find a thousand real ills. He who
cannot bear a little pain must expect to suffer greatly. If a man injures
his constitution by dissipation, you try to cure him with medicine;
the ill he fears is added to the ill he feels; the thought of death
makes it horrible and hastens its approach; the more we seek to escape
from it, the more we are aware of it; and we go through life in the
fear of death, blaming nature for the evils we have inflicted on ourselves
by our neglect of her laws.
O Man! seek no further for the author of evil; thou art he. There is
no evil but the evil you do or the evil you suffer, and both come from
yourself. Evil in general can only spring from disorder, and in the
order of the world I find a never failing system. Evil in particular
cases exists only in the mind of those who experience it; and this feeling
is not the gift of nature, but the work of man himself. Pain has little
power over those who, having thought little, look neither before nor
after. Take away our fatal progress, take away our faults and our vices,
take away man's handiwork, and all is well.
Where all is well, there is no such thing as injustice. Justice and
goodness are inseparable; now goodness is the necessary result of boundless
power and of that self-love which is innate in all sentient beings.
The omnipotent projects himself, so to speak, into the being of his
creatures. Creation and preservation are the everlasting work of power;
it does not act on that which has no existence; God is not the God of
the dead; he could not harm and destroy without injury to himself. The
omnipotent can only will what is good. [Footnote: The ancients were
right when they called the supreme God Optimus Maximus, but it would
have been better to say Maximus Optimus, for his goodness springs from
his power, he is good because he is great.] Therefore he who is supremely
good, because he is supremely powerful, must also be supremely just,
otherwise he would contradict himself; for that love of order which
creates order we call goodness and that love of order which preserves
order we call justice.
Men say God owes nothing to his creatures. I think he owes them all
he promised when he gave them their being. Now to give them the idea
of something good and to make them feel the need of it, is to promise
it to them. The more closely I study myself, the more carefully I consider,
the more plainly do I read these words, "Be just and you will be
happy." It is not so, however, in the present condition of things,
the wicked prospers and the oppression of the righteous continues. Observe
how angry we are when this expectation is disappointed. Conscience revolts
and murmurs against her Creator; she exclaims with cries and groans,
"Thou hast deceived me."
"I have deceived thee, rash soul! Who told thee this? Is thy soul
destroyed? Hast thou ceased to exist? O Brutus! O my son! let there
be no stain upon the close of thy noble life; do not abandon thy hope
and thy glory with thy corpse upon the plains of Philippi. Why dost
thou say, 'Virtue is naught,' when thou art about to enjoy the reward
of virtue? Thou art about to die! Nay, thou shalt live, and thus my
promise is fulfilled."
One might judge from the complaints of impatient men that God owes them
the reward before they have deserved it, that he is bound to pay for
virtue in advance. Oh! let us first be good and then we shall be happy.
Let us not claim the prize before we have won it, nor demand our wages
before we have finished our work. "It is not in the lists that
we crown the victors in the sacred games," says Plutarch, "it
is when they have finished their course."
If the soul is immaterial, it may survive the body; and if it so survives,
Providence is justified. Had I no other proof of the immaterial nature
of the soul, the triumph of the wicked and the oppression of the righteous
in this world would be enough to convince me. I should seek to resolve
so appalling a discord in the universal harmony. I should say to myself,
"All is not over with life, everything finds its place at death."
I should still have to answer the question, "What becomes of man
when all we know of him through our senses has vanished?" This
question no longer presents any difficulty to me when I admit the two
substances. It is easy to understand that what is imperceptible to those
senses escapes me, during my bodily life, when I perceive through my
senses only. When the union of soul and body is destroyed, I think one
may be dissolved and the other may be preserved. Why should the destruction
of the one imply the destruction of the other? On the contrary, so unlike
in their nature, they were during their union in a highly unstable condition,
and when this union comes to an end they both return to their natural
state; the active vital substance regains all the force which it expended
to set in motion the passive dead substance. Alas! my vices make me
only too well aware that man is but half alive during this life; the
life of the soul only begins with the death of the body.
But what is that life? Is the soul of man in its nature immortal? I
know not. My finite understanding cannot hold the infinite; what is
called eternity eludes my grasp. What can I assert or deny, how can
I reason with regard to what I cannot conceive? I believe that the soul
survives the body for the maintenance of order; who knows if this is
enough to make it eternal? However, I know that the body is worn out
and destroyed by the division of its parts, but I cannot conceive a
similar destruction of the conscious nature, and as I cannot imagine
how it can die, I presume that it does not die. As this assumption is
consoling and in itself not unreasonable, why should I fear to accept
it?
I am aware of my soul; it is known to me in feeling and in thought;
I know what it is without knowing its essence; I cannot reason about
ideas which are unknown to me. What I do know is this, that my personal
identity depends upon memory, and that to be indeed the same self I
must remember that I have existed. Now after death I could not recall
what I was when alive unless I also remembered what I felt and therefore
what I did; and I have no doubt that this remembrance will one day form
the happiness of the good and the torment of the bad. In this world
our inner consciousness is absorbed by the crowd of eager passions which
cheat remorse. The humiliation and disgrace involved in the practice
of virtue do not permit us to realise its charm. But when, freed from
the illusions of the bodily senses, we behold with joy the supreme Being
and the eternal truths which flow from him; when all the powers of our
soul are alive to the beauty of order and we are wholly occupied in
comparing what we have done with what we ought to have done, then it
is that the voice of conscience will regain its strength and sway; then
it is that the pure delight which springs from self-content, and the
sharp regret for our own degradation of that self, will decide by means
of overpowering feeling what shall be the fate which each has prepared
for himself. My good friend, do not ask me whether there are other sources
of happiness or suffering; I cannot tell; that which my fancy pictures
is enough to console me in this life and to bid me look for a life to
come. I do not say the good will be rewarded, for what greater good
can a truly good being expect than to exist in accordance with his nature?
But I do assert that the good will be happy, because their maker, the
author of all justice, who has made them capable of feeling, has not
made them that they may suffer; moreover, they have not abused their
freedom upon earth and they have not changed their fate through any
fault of their own; yet they have suffered in this life and it will
be made up to them in the life to come. This feeling relies not so much
on man's deserts as on the idea of good which seems to me inseparable
from the divine essence. I only assume that the laws of order are constant
and that God is true to himself.
Do not ask me whether the torments of the wicked will endure for ever,
whether the goodness of their creator can condemn them to the eternal
suffering; again, I cannot tell, and I have no empty curiosity for the
investigation of useless problems. How does the fate of the wicked concern
me? I take little interest in it. All the same I find it hard to believe
that they will be condemned to everlasting torments. If the supreme
justice calls for vengeance, it claims it in this life. The nations
of the world with their errors are its ministers. Justice uses self-inflicted
ills to punish the crimes which have deserved them. It is in your own
insatiable souls, devoured by envy, greed, and ambition, it is in the
midst of your false prosperity, that the avenging passions find the
due reward of your crimes. What need to seek a hell in the future life?
It is here in the breast of the wicked.
When our fleeting needs are over, and our mad desires are at rest, there
should also be an end of our passions and our crimes. Can pure spirits
be capable of any perversity? Having need of nothing, why should they
be wicked? If they are free from our gross senses, if their happiness
consists in the contemplation of other beings, they can only desire
what is good; and he who ceases to be bad can never be miserable. This
is what I am inclined to think though I have not been at the pains to
come to any decision. O God, merciful and good, whatever thy decrees
may be I adore them; if thou shouldst commit the wicked to everlasting
punishment, I abandon my feeble reason to thy justice; but if the remorse
of these wretched beings should in the course of time be extinguished,
if their sufferings should come to an end, and if the same peace shall
one day be the lot of all mankind, I give thanks to thee for this. Is
not the wicked my brother? How often have I been tempted to be like
him? Let him be delivered from his misery and freed from the spirit
of hatred that accompanied it; let him be as happy as I myself; his
happiness, far from arousing my jealousy, will only increase my own.
Thus it is that, in the contemplation of God in his works, and in the
study of such of his attributes as it concerned me to know, I have slowly
grasped and developed the idea, at first partial and imperfect, which
I have formed of this Infinite Being. But if this idea has become nobler
and greater it is also more suited to the human reason. As I approach
in spirit the eternal light, I am confused and dazzled by its glory,
and compelled to abandon all the earthly notions which helped me to
picture it to myself. God is no longer corporeal and sensible; the supreme
mind which rules the world is no longer the world itself; in vain do
I strive to grasp his inconceivable essence. When I think that it is
he that gives life and movement to the living and moving substance which
controls all living bodies; when I hear it said that my soul is spiritual
and that God is a spirit, I revolt against this abasement of the divine
essence; as if God and my soul were of one and the same nature! As if
God were not the one and only absolute being, the only really active,
feeling, thinking, willing being, from whom we derive our thought, feeling,
motion, will, our freedom and our very existence! We are free because
he wills our freedom, and his inexplicable substance is to our souls
what our souls are to our bodies. I know not whether he has created
matter, body, soul, the world itself. The idea of creation confounds
me and eludes my grasp; so far as I can conceive of it I believe it;
but I know that he has formed the universe and all that is, that he
has made and ordered all things. No doubt God is eternal; but can my
mind grasp the idea of eternity? Why should I cheat myself with meaningless
words? This is what I do understand; before things were--God was; he
will be when they are no more, and if all things come to an end he will
still endure. That a being beyond my comprehension should give life
to other beings, this is merely difficult and beyond my understanding;
but that Being and Nothing should be convertible terms, this is indeed
a palpable contradiction, an evident absurdity.
God is intelligent, but how? Man is intelligent when he reasons, but
the Supreme Intelligence does not need to reason; there is neither premise
nor conclusion for him, there is not even a proposition. The Supreme
Intelligence is wholly intuitive, it sees what is and what shall be;
all truths are one for it, as all places are but one point and all time
but one moment. Man's power makes use of means, the divine power is
self-active. God can because he wills; his will is his power. God is
good; this is certain; but man finds his happiness in the welfare of
his kind. God's happiness consists in the love of order; for it is through
order that he maintains what is, and unites each part in the whole.
God is just; of this I am sure, it is a consequence of his goodness;
man's injustice is not God's work, but his own; that moral justice which
seems to the philosophers a presumption against Providence, is to me
a proof of its existence. But man's justice consists in giving to each
his due; God's justice consists in demanding from each of us an account
of that which he has given us.
If I have succeeded in discerning these attributes of which I have no
absolute idea, it is in the form of unavoidable deductions, and by the
right use of my reason; but I affirm them without understanding them,
and at bottom that is no affirmation at all. In vain do I say, God is
thus, I feel it, I experience it, none the more do I understand how
God can be thus.
In a word: the more I strive to envisage his infinite essence the less
do I comprehend it; but it is, and that is enough for me; the less I
understand, the more I adore. I abase myself, saying, "Being of
beings, I am because thou art; to fix my thoughts on thee is to ascend
to the source of my being. The best use I can make of my reason is to
resign it before thee; my mind delights, my weakness rejoices, to feel
myself overwhelmed by thy greatness."
Having thus deduced from the perception of objects of sense and from
my inner consciousness, which leads me to judge of causes by my native
reason, the principal truths which I require to know, I must now seek
such principles of conduct as I can draw from them, and such rules as
I must lay down for my guidance in the fulfilment of my destiny in this
world, according to the purpose of my Maker. Still following the same
method, I do not derive these rules from the principles of the higher
philosophy, I find them in the depths of my heart, traced by nature
in characters which nothing can efface. I need only consult myself with
regard to what I wish to do; what I feel to be right is right, what
I feel to be wrong is wrong; conscience is the best casuist; and it
is only when we haggle with conscience that we have recourse to the
subtleties of argument. Our first duty is towards ourself; yet how often
does the voice of others tell us that in seeking our good at the expense
of others we are doing ill? We think we are following the guidance of
nature, and we are resisting it; we listen to what she says to our senses,
and we neglect what she says to our heart; the active being obeys, the
passive commands. Conscience is the voice of the soul, the passions
are the voice of the body. It is strange that these voices often contradict
each other? And then to which should we give heed? Too often does reason
deceive us; we have only too good a right to doubt her; but conscience
never deceives us; she is the true guide of man; it is to the soul what
instinct is to the body, [Footnote: Modern philosophy, which only admits
what it can understand, is careful not to admit this obscure power called
instinct which seems to guide the animals to some end without any acquired
experience. Instinct, according to some of our wise philosophers, is
only a secret habit of reflection, acquired by reflection; and from
the way in which they explain this development one ought to suppose
that children reflect more than grown-up people: a paradox strange enough
to be worth examining. Without entering upon this discussion I must
ask what name I shall give to the eagerness with which my dog makes
war on the moles he does not eat, or to the patience with which he sometimes
watches them for hours and the skill with which he seizes them, throws
them to a distance from their earth as soon as they emerge, and then
kills them and leaves them. Yet no one has trained him to this sport,
nor even told him there were such things as moles. Again, I ask, and
this is a more important question, why, when I threatened this same
dog for the first time, why did he throw himself on the ground with
his paws folded, in such a suppliant attitude .....calculated to touch
me, a position which he would have maintained if, without being touched
by it, I had continued to beat him in that position? What! Had my dog,
little more than a puppy, acquired moral ideas? Did he know the meaning
of mercy and generosity? By what acquired knowledge did he seek to appease
my wrath by yielding to my discretion? Every dog in the world does almost
the same thing in similar circumstances, and I am asserting nothing
but what any one can verify for himself. Will the philosophers, who
so scornfully reject instinct, kindly explain this fact by the mere
play of sensations and experience which they assume we have acquired?
Let them give an account of it which will satisfy any sensible man;
in that case I have nothing further to urge, and I will say no more
of instinct.] he who obeys his conscience is following nature and he
need not fear that he will go astray. This is a matter of great importance,
continued my benefactor, seeing that I was about to interrupt him; let
me stop awhile to explain it more fully.
The morality of our actions consists entirely in the judgments we ourselves
form with regard to them. If good is good, it must be good in the depth
of our heart as well as in our actions; and the first reward of justice
is the consciousness that we are acting justly. If moral goodness is
in accordance with our nature, man can only be healthy in mind and body
when he is good. If it is not so, and if man is by nature evil, he cannot
cease to be evil without corrupting his nature, and goodness in him
is a crime against nature. If he is made to do harm to his fellow-creatures,
as the wolf is made to devour his prey, a humane man would be as depraved
a creature as a pitiful wolf; and virtue alone would cause remorse.
My young friend, let us look within, let us set aside all personal prejudices
and see whither our inclinations lead us. Do we take more pleasure in
the sight of the sufferings of others or their joys? Is it pleasanter
to do a kind action or an unkind action, and which leaves the more delightful
memory behind it? Why do you enjoy the theatre? Do you delight in the
crimes you behold? Do you weep over the punishment which overtakes the
criminal? They say we are indifferent to everything but self-interest;
yet we find our consolation in our sufferings in the charms of friendship
and humanity, and even in our pleasures we should be too lonely and
miserable if we had no one to share them with us. If there is no such
thing as morality in man's heart, what is the source of his rapturous
admiration of noble deeds, his passionate devotion to great men? What
connection is there between self-interest and this enthusiasm for virtue?
Why should I choose to be Cato dying by his own hand, rather than Caesar
in his triumphs? Take from our hearts this love of what is noble and
you rob us of the joy of life. The mean-spirited man in whom these delicious
feelings have been stifled among vile passions, who by thinking of no
one but himself comes at last to love no one but himself, this man feels
no raptures, his cold heart no longer throbs with joy, and his eyes
no longer fill with the sweet tears of sympathy, he delights in nothing;
the wretch has neither life nor feeling, he is already dead.
There are many bad men in this world, but there are few of these dead
souls, alive only to self-interest, and insensible to all that is right
and good. We only delight in injustice so long as it is to our own advantage;
in every other case we wish the innocent to be protected. If we see
some act of violence or injustice in town or country, our hearts are
at once stirred to their depths by an instinctive anger and wrath, which
bids us go to the help of the oppressed; but we are restrained by a
stronger duty, and the law deprives us of our right to protect the innocent.
On the other hand, if some deed of mercy or generosity meets our eye,
what reverence and love does it inspire! Do we not say to ourselves,
"I should like to have done that myself"? What does it matter
to us that two thousand years ago a man was just or unjust? and yet
we take the same interest in ancient history as if it happened yesterday.
What are the crimes of Cataline to me? I shall not be his victim. Why
then have I the same horror of his crimes as if he were living now?
We do not hate the wicked merely because of the harm they do to ourselves,
but because they are wicked. Not only do we wish to be happy ourselves,
we wish others to be happy too, and if this happiness does not interfere
with our own happiness, it increases it. In conclusion, whether we will
or not, we pity the unfortunate; when we see their suffering we suffer
too. Even the most depraved are not wholly without this instinct, and
it often leads them to self-contradiction. The highwayman who robs the
traveller, clothes the nakedness of the poor; the fiercest murderer
supports a fainting man.
Men speak of the voice of remorse, the secret punishment of hidden crimes,
by which such are often brought to light. Alas! who does not know its
unwelcome voice? We speak from experience, and we would gladly stifle
this imperious feeling which causes us such agony. Let us obey the call
of nature; we shall see that her yoke is easy and that when we give
heed to her voice we find a joy in the answer of a good conscience.
The wicked fears and flees from her; he delights to escape from himself;
his anxious eyes look around him for some object of diversion; without
bitter satire and rude mockery he would always be sorrowful; the scornful
laugh is his one pleasure. Not so the just man, who finds his peace
within himself; there is joy not malice in his laughter, a joy which
springs from his own heart; he is as cheerful alone as in company, his
satisfaction does not depend on those who approach him; it includes
them.
Cast your eyes over every nation of the world; peruse every volume of
its history; in the midst of all these strange and cruel forms of worship,
among this amazing variety of manners and customs, you will everywhere
find the same ideas of right and justice; everywhere the same principles
of morality, the same ideas of good and evil. The old paganism gave
birth to abominable gods who would have been punished as scoundrels
here below, gods who merely offered, as a picture of supreme happiness,
crimes to be committed and lust to be gratified. But in vain did vice
descend from the abode of the gods armed with their sacred authority;
the moral instinct refused to admit it into the heart of man. While
the debaucheries of Jupiter were celebrated, the continence of Xenocrates
was revered; the chaste Lucrece adored the shameless Venus; the bold
Roman offered sacrifices to Fear; he invoked the god who mutilated his
father, and he died without a murmur at the hand of his own father.
The most unworthy gods were worshipped by the noblest men. The sacred
voice of nature was stronger than the voice of the gods, and won reverence
upon earth; it seemed to relegate guilt and the guilty alike to heaven.
There is therefore at the bottom of our hearts an innate principle of
justice and virtue, by which, in spite of our maxims, we judge our own
actions or those of others to be good or evil; and it is this principle
that I call conscience.
But at this word I hear the murmurs of all the wise men so-called. Childish
errors, prejudices of our upbringing, they exclaim in concert! There
is nothing in the human mind but what it has gained by experience; and
we judge everything solely by means of the ideas we have acquired. They
go further; they even venture to reject the clear and universal agreement
of all peoples, and to set against this striking unanimity in the judgment
of mankind, they seek out some obscure exception known to themselves
alone; as if the whole trend of nature were rendered null by the depravity
of a single nation, and as if the existence of monstrosities made an
end of species. But to what purpose does the sceptic Montaigne strive
himself to unearth in some obscure corner of the world a custom which
is contrary to the ideas of justice? To what purpose does he credit
the most untrustworthy travellers, while he refuses to believe the greatest
writers? A few strange and doubtful customs, based on local causes,
unknown to us; shall these destroy a general inference based on the
agreement of all the nations of the earth, differing from each other
in all else, but agreed in this? O Montaigne, you pride yourself on
your truth and honesty; be sincere and truthful, if a philosopher can
be so, and tell me if there is any country upon earth where it is a
crime to keep one's plighted word, to be merciful, helpful, and generous,
where the good man is scorned, and the traitor is held in honour.
Self-interest, so they say, induces each of us to agree for the common
good. But bow is it that the good man consents to this to his own hurt?
Does a man go to death from self-interest? No doubt each man acts for
his own good, but if there is no such thing as moral good to be taken
into consideration, self-interest will only enable you to account for
the deeds of the wicked; possibly you will not attempt to do more. A
philosophy which could find no place for good deeds would be too detestable;
you would find yourself compelled either to find some mean purpose,
some wicked motive, or to abuse Socrates and slander Regulus. If such
doctrines ever took root among us, the voice of nature, together with
the voice of reason, would constantly protest against them, till no
adherent of such teaching could plead an honest excuse for his partisanship.
It is no part of my scheme to enter at present into metaphysical discussions
which neither you nor I can understand, discussions which really lead
nowhere. I have told you already that I do not wish to philosophise
with you, but to help you to consult your own heart. If all the philosophers
in the world should prove that I am wrong, and you feel that I am right,
that is all I ask.
For this purpose it is enough to lead you to distinguish between our
acquired ideas and our natural feelings; for feeling precedes knowledge;
and since we do not learn to seek what is good for us and avoid what
is bad for us, but get this desire from nature, in the same way the
love of good and the hatred of evil are as natural to us as our self-love.
The decrees of conscience are not judgments but feelings. Although all
our ideas come from without, the feelings by which they are weighed
are within us, and it is by these feelings alone that we perceive fitness
or unfitness of things in relation to ourselves, which leads us to seek
or shun these things.
To exist is to feel; our feeling is undoubtedly earlier than our intelligence,
and we had feelings before we had ideas.[Footnote: In some respects
ideas are feelings and feelings are ideas. Both terms are appropriate
to any perception with which we are concerned, appropriate both to the
object of that perception and to ourselves who are affected by it; it
is merely the order in which we are affected which decides the appropriate
term. When we are chiefly concerned with the object and only think of
ourselves as it were by reflection, that is an idea; when, on the other
hand, the impression received excites our chief attention and we only
think in the second place of the object which caused it, it is a feeling.]
Whatever may be the cause of our being, it has provided for our preservation
by giving us feelings suited to our nature; and no one can deny that
these at least are innate. These feelings, so far as the individual
is concerned, are self-love, fear, pain, the dread of death, the desire
for comfort. Again, if, as it is impossible to doubt, man is by nature
sociable, or at least fitted to become sociable, he can only be so by
means of other innate feelings, relative to his kind; for if only physical
well-being were considered, men would certainly be scattered rather
than brought together. But the motive power of conscience is derived
from the moral system formed through this twofold relation to himself
and to his fellow-men. To know good is not to love it; this knowledge
is not innate in man; but as soon as his reason leads him to perceive
it, his conscience impels him to love it; it is this feeling which is
innate.
So I do not think, my young friend, that it is impossible to explain
the immediate force of conscience as a result of our own nature, independent
of reason itself. And even should it be impossible, it is unnecessary;
for those who deny this principle, admitted and received by everybody
else in the world, do not prove that there is no such thing; they are
content to affirm, and when we affirm its existence we have quite as
good grounds as they, while we have moreover the witness within us,
the voice of conscience, which speaks on its own behalf. If the first
beams of judgment dazzle us and confuse the objects we behold, let us
wait till our feeble sight grows clear and strong, and in the light
of reason we shall soon behold these very objects as nature has already
showed them to us. Or rather let us be simpler and less pretentious;
let us be content with the first feelings we experience in ourselves,
since science always brings us back to these, unless it has led us astray.
Conscience! Conscience! Divine instinct, immortal voice from heaven;
sure guide for a creature ignorant and finite indeed, yet intelligent
and free; infallible judge of good and evil, making man like to God!
In thee consists the excellence of man's nature and the morality of
his actions; apart from thee, I find nothing in myself to raise me above
the beasts--nothing but the sad privilege of wandering from one error
to another, by the help of an unbridled understanding and a reason which
knows no principle.
Thank heaven we have now got rid of all that alarming show of philosophy;
we may be men without being scholars; now that we need not spend our
life in the study of morality, we have found a less costly and surer
guide through this vast labyrinth of human thought. But it is not enough
to be aware that there is such a guide; we must know her and follow
her. If she speaks to all hearts, how is it that so few give heed to
her voice? She speaks to us in the language of nature, and everything
leads us to forget that tongue. Conscience is timid, she loves peace
and retirement; she is startled by noise and numbers; the prejudices
from which she is said to arise are her worst enemies. She flees before
them or she is silent; their noisy voices drown her words, so that she
cannot get a hearing; fanaticism dares to counterfeit her voice and
to inspire crimes in her name. She is discouraged by ill-treatment;
she no longer speaks to us, no longer answers to our call; when she
has been scorned so long, it is as hard to recall her as it was to banish
her.
How often in the course of my inquiries have I grown weary of my own
coldness of heart! How often have grief and weariness poured their poison
into my first meditations and made them hateful to me! My barren heart
yielded nothing but a feeble zeal and a lukewarm love of truth. I said
to myself: Why should I strive to find what does not exist? Moral good
is a dream, the pleasures of sense are the only real good. When once
we have lost the taste for the pleasures of the soul, how hard it is
to recover it! How much more difficult to acquire it if we have never
possessed it! If there were any man so wretched as never to have done
anything all his life long which he could remember with pleasure, and
which would make him glad to have lived, that man would be incapable
of self-knowledge, and for want of knowledge of goodness, of which his
nature is capable, he would be constrained to remain in his wickedness
and would be for ever miserable. But do you think there is any one man
upon earth so depraved that he has never yielded to the temptation of
well-doing? This temptation is so natural, so pleasant, that it is impossible
always to resist it; and the thought of the pleasure it has once afforded
is enough to recall it constantly to our memory. Unluckily it is hard
at first to find satisfaction for it; we have any number of reasons
for refusing to follow the inclinations of our heart; prudence, so called,
restricts the heart within the limits of the self; a thousand efforts
are needed to break these bonds. The joy of well-doing is the prize
of having done well, and we must deserve the prize before we win it.
There is nothing sweeter than virtue; but we do not know this till we
have tried it. Like Proteus in the fable, she first assumes a thousand
terrible shapes when we would embrace her, and only shows her true self
to those who refuse to let her go.
Ever at strife between my natural feelings, which spoke of the common
weal, and my reason, which spoke of self, I should have drifted through
life in perpetual uncertainty, hating evil, loving good, and always
at war with myself, if my heart had not received further light, if that
truth which determined my opinions had not also settled my conduct,
and set me at peace with myself. Reason alone is not a sufficient foundation
for virtue; what solid ground can be found? Virtue we are told is love
of order. But can this love prevail over my love for my own well-being,
and ought it so to prevail? Let them give me clear and sufficient reason
for this preference. Their so-called principle is in truth a mere playing
with words; for I also say that vice is love of order, differently understood.
Wherever there is feeling and intelligence, there is some sort of moral
order. The difference is this: the good man orders his life with regard
to all men; the wicked orders it for self alone. The latter centres
all things round himself; the other measures his radius and remains
on the circumference. Thus his place depends on the common centre, which
is God, and on all the concentric circles which are His creatures. If
there is no God, the wicked is right and the good man is nothing but
a fool.
My child! May you one day feel what a burden is removed when, having
fathomed the vanity of human thoughts and tasted the bitterness of passion,
you find at length near at hand the path of wisdom, the prize of this
life's labours, the source of that happiness which you despaired of.
Every duty of natural law, which man's injustice had almost effaced
from my heart, is engraven there, for the second time in the name of
that eternal justice which lays these duties upon me and beholds my
fulfilment of them. I feel myself merely the instrument of the Omnipotent,
who wills what is good, who performs it, who will bring about my own
good through the co-operation of my will with his own, and by the right
use of my liberty. I acquiesce in the order he establishes, certain
that one day I shall enjoy that order and find my happiness in it; for
what sweeter joy is there than this, to feel oneself a part of a system
where all is good? A prey to pain, I bear it in patience, remembering
that it will soon be over, and that it results from a body which is
not mine. If I do a good deed in secret, I know that it is seen, and
my conduct in this life is a pledge of the life to come. When I suffer
injustice, I say to myself, the Almighty who does all things well will
reward me: my bodily needs, my poverty, make the idea of death less
intolerable. There will be all the fewer bonds to be broken when my
hour comes.
Why is my soul subjected to my senses, and imprisoned in this body by
which it is enslaved and thwarted? I know not; have I entered into the
counsels of the Almighty? But I may, without rashness, venture on a
modest conjecture. I say to myself: If man's soul had remained in a
state of freedom and innocence, what merit would there have been in
loving and obeying the order he found established, an order which it
would not have been to his advantage to disturb? He would be happy,
no doubt, but his happiness would not attain to the highest point, the
pride of virtue, and the witness of a good conscience within him; he
would be but as the angels are, and no doubt the good man will be more
than they. Bound to a mortal body, by bonds as strange as they are powerful,
his care for the preservation of this body tempts the soul to think
only of self, and gives it an interest opposed to the general order
of things, which it is still capable of knowing and loving; then it
is that the right use of his freedom becomes at once the merit and the
reward; then it is that it prepares for itself unending happiness, by
resisting its earthly passions and following its original direction.
If even in the lowly position in which we are placed during our present
life our first impulses are always good, if all our vices are of our
own making, why should we complain that they are our masters? Why should
we blame the Creator for the ills we have ourselves created, and the
enemies we ourselves have armed against us? Oh, let us leave man unspoilt;
he will always find it easy to be good and he will always be happy without
remorse. The guilty, who assert that they are driven to crime, are liars
as well as evil-doers; how is it that they fail to perceive that the
weakness they bewail is of their own making; that their earliest depravity
was the result of their own will; that by dint of wishing to yield to
temptations, they at length yield to them whether they will or no and
make them irresistible? No doubt they can no longer avoid being weak
and wicked, but they need not have become weak and wicked. Oh, how easy
would it be to preserve control of ourselves and of our passions, even
in this life, if with habits still unformed, with a mind beginning to
expand, we were able to keep to such things as we ought to know, in
order to value rightly what is unknown; if we really wished to learn,
not that we might shine before the eyes of others, but that we might
be wise and good in accordance with our nature, that we might be happy
in the performance of our duty. This study seems tedious and painful
to us, for we do not attempt it till we are already corrupted by vice
and enslaved by our passions. Our judgments and our standards of worth
are determined before we have the knowledge of good and evil; and then
we measure all things by this false standard, and give nothing its true
worth.
There is an age when the heart is still free, but eager, unquiet, greedy
of a happiness which is still unknown, a happiness which it seeks in
curiosity and doubt; deceived by the senses it settles at length upon
the empty show of happiness and thinks it has found it where it is not.
In my own case these illusions endured for a long time. Alas! too late
did I become aware of them, and I have not succeeded in overcoming them
altogether; they will last as long as this mortal body from which they
arise. If they lead me astray, I am at least no longer deceived by them;
I know them for what they are, and even when I give way to them, I despise
myself; far from regarding them as the goal of my happiness, I behold
in them an obstacle to it. I long for the time when, freed from the
fetters of the body, I shall be myself, at one with myself, no longer
torn in two, when I myself shall suffice for my own happiness. Meanwhile
I am happy even in this life, for I make small account of all its evils,
in which I regard myself as having little or no part, while all the
real good that I can get out of this life depends on myself alone.
To raise myself so far as may be even now to this state of happiness,
strength, and freedom, I exercise myself in lofty contemplation. I consider
the order of the universe, not to explain it by any futile system, but
to revere it without ceasing, to adore the wise Author who reveals himself
in it. I hold intercourse with him; I immerse all my powers in his divine
essence; I am overwhelmed by his kindness, I bless him and his gifts,
but I do not pray to him. What should I ask of him--to change the order
of nature, to work miracles on my behalf? Should I, who am bound to
love above all things the order which he has established in his wisdom
and maintained by his providence, should I desire the disturbance of
that order on my own account? No, that rash prayer would deserve to
be punished rather than to be granted. Neither do I ask of him the power
to do right; why should I ask what he has given me already? Has he not
given me conscience that I may love the right, reason that I may perceive
it, and freedom that I may choose it? If I do evil, I have no excuse;
I do it of my own free will; to ask him to change my will is to ask
him to do what he asks of me; it is to want him to do the work while
I get the wages; to be dissatisfied with my lot is to wish to be no
longer a man, to wish to be other than what I am, to wish for disorder
and evil. Thou source of justice and truth, merciful and gracious God,
in thee do I trust, and the desire of my heart is--Thy will be done.
When I unite my will with thine, I do what thou doest; I have a share
in thy goodness; I believe that I enjoy beforehand the supreme happiness
which is the reward of goodness.
In my well-founded self-distrust the only thing that I ask of God, or
rather expect from his justice, is to correct my error if I go astray,
if that error is dangerous to me. To be honest I need not think myself
infallible; my opinions, which seem to me true, may be so many lies;
for what man is there who does not cling to his own beliefs; and how
many men are agreed in everything? The illusion which deceives me may
indeed have its source in myself, but it is God alone who can remove
it. I have done all I can to attain to truth; but its source is beyond
my reach; is it my fault if my strength fails me and I can go no further;
it is for Truth to draw near to me.
The good priest had spoken with passion; he and I were overcome with
emotion. It seemed to me as if I were listening to the divine Orpheus
when he sang the earliest hymns and taught men the worship of the gods.
I saw any number of objections which might be raised; yet I raised none,
for I perceived that they were more perplexing than serious, and that
my inclination took his part. When he spoke to me according to his conscience,
my own seemed to confirm what he said.
"The novelty of the sentiments you have made known to me,"
said I, "strikes me all the more because of what you confess you
do not know, than because of what you say you believe. They seem to
be very like that theism or natural religion, which Christians profess
to confound with atheism or irreligion which is their exact opposite.
But in the present state of my faith I should have to ascend rather
than descend to accept your views, and I find it difficult to remain
just where you are unless I were as wise as you. That I may be at least
as honest, I want time to take counsel with myself. By your own showing,
the inner voice must be my guide, and you have yourself told me that
when it has long been silenced it cannot be recalled in a moment. I
take what you have said to heart, and I must consider it. If after I
have thought things out, I am as convinced as you are, you will be my
final teacher, and I will be your disciple till death. Continue your
teaching however; you have only told me half what I must know. Speak
to me of revelation, of the Scriptures, of those difficult doctrines
among which I have strayed ever since I was a child, incapable either
of understanding or believing them, unable to adopt or reject them."
"Yes, my child," said he, embracing me, "I will tell
you all I think; I will not open my heart to you by halves; but the
desire you express was necessary before I could cast aside all reserve.
So far I have told you nothing but what I thought would be of service
to you, nothing but what I was quite convinced of. The inquiry which
remains to be made is very difficult. It seems to me full of perplexity,
mystery, and darkness; I bring to it only doubt and distrust. I make
up my mind with trembling, and I tell you my doubts rather than my convictions.
If your own opinions were more settled I should hesitate to show you
mine; but in your present condition, to think like me would be gain.
[Footnote: I think the worthy clergyman might say this at the present
time to the general public.] Moreover, give to my words only the authority
of reason; I know not whether I am mistaken. It is difficult in discussion
to avoid assuming sometimes a dogmatic tone; but remember in this respect
that all my assertions are but reasons to doubt me. Seek truth for yourself,
for my own part I only promise you sincerity.
"In my exposition you find nothing but natural religion; strange
that we should need more! How shall I become aware of this need? What
guilt can be mine so long as I serve God according to the knowledge
he has given to my mind, and the feelings he has put into my heart?
What purity of morals, what dogma useful to man and worthy of its author,
can I derive from a positive doctrine which cannot be derived without
the aid of this doctrine by the right use of my faculties? Show me what
you can add to the duties of the natural law, for the glory of God,
for the good of mankind, and for my own welfare; and what virtue you
will get from the new form of religion which does not result from mine.
The grandest ideas of the Divine nature come to us from reason only.
Behold the spectacle of nature; listen to the inner voice. Has not God
spoken it all to our eyes, to our conscience, to our reason? What more
can man tell us? Their revelations do but degrade God, by investing
him with passions like our own. Far from throwing light upon the ideas
of the Supreme Being, special doctrines seem to me to confuse these
ideas; far from ennobling them, they degrade them; to the inconceivable
mysteries which surround the Almighty, they add absurd contradictions,
they make man proud, intolerant, and cruel; instead of bringing peace
upon earth, they bring fire and sword. I ask myself what is the use
of it all, and I find no answer. I see nothing but the crimes of men
and the misery of mankind.
"They tell me a revelation was required to teach men how God would
be served; as a proof of this they point to the many strange rites which
men have instituted, and they do not perceive that this very diversity
springs from the fanciful nature of the revelations. As soon as the
nations took to making God speak, every one made him speak in his own
fashion, and made him say what he himself wanted. Had they listened
only to what God says in the heart of man, there would have been but
one religion upon earth.
"One form of worship was required; just so, but was this a matter
of such importance as to require all the power of the Godhead to establish
it? Do not let us confuse the outward forms of religion with religion
itself. The service God requires is of the heart; and when the heart
is sincere that is ever the same. It is a strange sort of conceit which
fancies that God takes such an interest in the shape of the priest's
vestments, the form of words he utters, the gestures he makes before
the altar and all his genuflections. Oh, my friend, stand upright, you
will still be too near the earth. God desires to be worshipped in spirit
and in truth; this duty belongs to every religion, every country, every
individual. As to the form of worship, if order demands uniformity,
that is only a matter of discipline and needs no revelation.
"These thoughts did not come to me to begin with. Carried away
by the prejudices of my education, and by that dangerous vanity which
always strives to lift man out of his proper sphere, when I could not
raise my feeble thoughts up to the great Being, I tried to bring him
down to my own level. I tried to reduce the distance he has placed between
his nature and mine. I desired more immediate relations, more individual
instruction; not content to make God in the image of man that I might
be favoured above my fellows, I desired supernatural knowledge; I required
a special form of worship; I wanted God to tell me what he had not told
others, or what others had not understood like myself.
"Considering the point I had now reached as the common centre from
which all believers set out on the quest for a more enlightened form
of religion, I merely found in natural religion the elements of all
religion. I beheld the multitude of diverse sects which hold sway upon
earth, each of which accuses the other of falsehood and error; which
of these, I asked, is the right? Every one replied, 'My own;' every
one said, 'I alone and those who agree with me think rightly, all the
others are mistaken.' And how do you know that your sect is in the right?
Because God said so. And how do you know God said so? [Footnote: "All
men," said a wise and good priest, "maintain that they hold
and believe their religion (and all use the same jargon), not of man,
nor of any creature, but of God. But to speak truly, without pretence
or flattery, none of them do so; whatever they may say, religions are
taught by human hands and means; take, for example, the way in which
religions have been received by the world, the way in which they are
still received every day by individuals; the nation, the country, the
locality gives the religion; we belong to the religion of the place
where we are born and brought up; we are baptised or circumcised, we
are Christians, Jews, Mohametans before we know that we are men; we
do not pick and choose our religion for see how ill the life and conduct
agree with the religion, see for what slight and human causes men go
against the teaching of their religion."--Charron, De la Sagesse.--It
seems clear that the honest creed of the holy theologian of Condom would
not have differed greatly from that of the Savoyard priest.] And who
told you that God said it? My pastor, who knows all about it. My pastor
tells me what to believe and I believe it; he assures me that any one
who says anything else is mistaken, and I give not heed to them.
"What! thought I, is not truth one; can that which is true for
me be false for you? If those who follow the right path and those who
go astray have the same method, what merit or what blame can be assigned
to one more than to the other? Their choice is the result of chance;
it is unjust to hold them responsible for it, to reward or punish them
for being born in one country or another. To dare to say that God judges
us in this manner is an outrage on his justice.
"Either all religions are good and pleasing to God, or if there
is one which he prescribes for men, if they will be punished for despising
it, he will have distinguished it by plain and certain signs by which
it can be known as the only true religion; these signs are alike in
every time and place, equally plain to all men, great or small, learned
or unlearned, Europeans, Indians, Africans, savages. If there were but
one religion upon earth, and if all beyond its pale were condemned to
eternal punishment, and if there were in any corner of the world one
single honest man who was not convinced by this evidence, the God of
that religion would be the most unjust and cruel of tyrants.
"Let us therefore seek honestly after truth; let us yield nothing
to the claims of birth, to the authority of parents and pastors, but
let us summon to the bar of conscience and of reason all that they have
taught us from our childhood. In vain do they exclaim, 'Submit your
reason;' a deceiver might say as much; I must have reasons for submitting
my reason.
"All the theology I can get for myself by observation of the universe
and by the use of my faculties is contained in what I have already told
you. To know more one must have recourse to strange means. These means
cannot be the authority of men, for every man is of the same species
as myself, and all that a man knows by nature I am capable of knowing,
and another may be deceived as much as I; when I believe what he says,
it is not because he says it but because he proves its truth. The witness
of man is therefore nothing more than the witness of my own reason,
and it adds nothing to the natural means which God has given me for
the knowledge of truth.
"Apostle of truth, what have you to tell me of which I am not the
sole judge? God himself has spoken; give heed to his revelation. That
is another matter. God has spoken, these are indeed words which demand
attention. To whom has he spoken? He has spoken to men. Why then have
I heard nothing? He has instructed others to make known his words to
you. I understand; it is men who come and tell me what God has said.
I would rather have heard the words of God himself; it would have been
as easy for him and I should have been secure from fraud. He protects
you from fraud by showing that his envoys come from him. How does he
show this? By miracles. Where are these miracles? In the books. And
who wrote the books? Men. And who saw the miracles? The men who bear
witness to them. What! Nothing but human testimony! Nothing but men
who tell me what others told them! How many men between God and me!
Let us see, however, let us examine, compare, and verify. Oh! if God
had but deigned to free me from all this labour, I would have served
him with all my heart.
"Consider, my friend, the terrible controversy in which I am now
engaged; what vast learning is required to go back to the remotest antiquity,
to examine, weigh, confront prophecies, revelations, facts, all the
monuments of faith set forth throughout the world, to assign their date,
place, authorship, and occasion. What exactness of critical judgment
is needed to distinguish genuine documents from forgeries, to compare
objections with their answers, translations with their originals; to
decide as to the impartiality of witnesses, their common-sense, their
knowledge; to make sure that nothing has been omitted, nothing added,
nothing transposed, altered, or falsified; to point out any remaining
contradictions, to determine what weight should be given to the silence
of our adversaries with regard to the charges brought against them;
how far were they aware of those charges; did they think them sufficiently
serious to require an answer; were books sufficiently well known for
our books to reach them; have we been honest enough to allow their books
to circulate among ourselves and to leave their strongest objections
unaltered?
"When the authenticity of all these documents is accepted, we must
now pass to the evidence of their authors' mission; we must know the
laws of chance, and probability, to decide which prophecy cannot be
fulfilled without a miracle; we must know the spirit of the original
languages, to distinguish between prophecy and figures of speech; we
must know what facts are in accordance with nature and what facts are
not, so that we may say how far a clever man may deceive the eyes of
the simple and may even astonish the learned; we must discover what
are the characteristics of a prodigy and how its authenticity may be
established, not only so far as to gain credence, but so that doubt
may be deserving of punishment; we must compare the evidence for true
and false miracles, and find sure tests to distinguish between them;
lastly we must say why God chose as a witness to his words means which
themselves require so much evidence on their behalf, as if he were playing
with human credulity, and avoiding of set purpose the true means of
persuasion.
"Assuming that the divine majesty condescends so far as to make
a man the channel of his sacred will, is it reasonable, is it fair,
to demand that the whole of mankind should obey the voice of this minister
without making him known as such? Is it just to give him as his sole
credentials certain private signs, performed in the presence of a few
obscure persons, signs which everybody else can only know by hearsay?
If one were to believe all the miracles that the uneducated and credulous
profess to have seen in every country upon earth, every sect would be
in the right; there would be more miracles than ordinary events; and
it would be the greatest miracle if there were no miracles wherever
there were persecuted fanatics. The unchangeable order of nature is
the chief witness to the wise hand that guides it; if there were many
exceptions, I should hardly know what to think; for my own part I have
too great a faith in God to believe in so many miracles which are so
little worthy of him.
"Let a man come and say to us: Mortals, I proclaim to you the will
of the Most Highest; accept my words as those of him who has sent me;
I bid the sun to change his course, the stars to range themselves in
a fresh order, the high places to become smooth, the floods to rise
up, the earth to change her face. By these miracles who will not recognise
the master of nature? She does not obey impostors, their miracles are
wrought in holes and corners, in deserts, within closed doors, where
they find easy dupes among a small company of spectators already disposed
to believe them. Who will venture to tell me how many eye-witnesses
are required to make a miracle credible! What use are your miracles,
performed if proof of your doctrine, if they themselves require so much
proof! You might as well have let them alone.
"There still remains the most important inquiry of all with regard
to the doctrine proclaimed; for since those who tell us God works miracles
in this world, profess that the devil sometimes imitates them, when
we have found the best attested miracles we have got very little further;
and since the magicians of Pharaoh dared in the presence of Moses to
counterfeit the very signs he wrought at God's command, why should they
not, behind his back, claim a like authority? So when we have proved
our doctrine by means of miracles, we must prove our miracles by means
of doctrine, [Footnote: This is expressly stated in many passages of
Scripture, among others in Deuteronomy xiii., where it is said that
when a prophet preaching strange gods confirms his words by means of
miracles and what he foretells comes to pass, far from giving heed to
him, this prophet must be put to death. If then the heathen put the
apostles to death when they preached a strange god and confirmed their
words by miracles which came to pass I cannot see what grounds we have
for complaint which they could not at once turn against us. Now, what
should be done in such a case? There is only one course; to return to
argument and let the miracles alone. It would have been better not to
have had recourse to them at all. That is plain common-sense which can
only be obscured by great subtlety of distinction. Subtleties in Christianity!
So Jesus Christ was mistaken when he promised the kingdom of heaven
to the simple, he was mistaken when he began his finest discourse with
the praise of the poor in spirit, if so much wit is needed to understand
his teaching and to get others to believe in him. When you have convinced
me that submission is my duty, all will be well; but to convince me
of this, come down to my level; adapt your arguments to a lowly mind,
or I shall not recognise you as a true disciple of your master, and
it is not his doctrine that you are teaching me.] for fear lest we should
take the devil's doings for the handiwork of God. What think you of
this dilemma?
"This doctrine, if it comes from God, should bear the sacred stamp
of the godhead; not only should it illumine the troubled thoughts which
reason imprints on our minds, but it should also offer us a form of
worship, a morality, and rules of conduct in accordance with the attributes
by means of which we alone conceive of God's essence. If then it teaches
us what is absurd and unreasonable, if it inspires us with feelings
of aversion for our fellows and terror for ourselves, if it paints us
a God, angry, jealous, revengeful, partial, hating men, a God of war
and battles, ever ready to strike and to destroy, ever speaking of punishment
and torment, boasting even of the punishment of the innocent, my heart
would not be drawn towards this terrible God, I would take good care
not to quit the realm of natural religion to embrace such a religion
as that; for you see plainly I must choose between them. Your God is
not ours. He who begins by selecting a chosen people, and proscribing
the rest of mankind, is not our common father; he who consigns to eternal
punishment the greater part of his creatures, is not the merciful and
gracious God revealed to me by my reason.
"Reason tells me that dogmas should be plain, clear, and striking
in their simplicity. If there is something lacking in natural religion,
it is with respect to the obscurity in which it leaves the great truths
it teaches; revelation should teach us these truths in a way which the
mind of man can understand; it should bring them within his reach, make
him comprehend them, so that he may believe them. Faith is confirmed
and strengthened by understanding; the best religion is of necessity
the simplest. He who hides beneath mysteries and contradictions the
religion that he preaches to me, teaches me at the same time to distrust
that religion. The God whom I adore is not the God of darkness, he has
not given me understanding in order to forbid me to use it; to tell
me to submit my reason is to insult the giver of reason. The minister
of truth does not tyrannise over my reason, he enlightens it.
"We have set aside all human authority, and without it I do not
see how any man can convince another by preaching a doctrine contrary
to reason. Let them fight it out, and let us see what they have to say
with that harshness of speech which is common to both.
"INSPIRATION: Reason tells you that the whole is greater than the
part; but I tell you, in God's name, that the part is greater than the
whole.
"REASON: And who are you to dare to tell me that God contradicts
himself? And which shall I choose to believe. God who teaches me, through
my reason, the eternal truth, or you who, in his name, proclaim an absurdity?
"INSPIRATION: Believe me, for my teaching is more positive; and
I will prove to you beyond all manner of doubt that he has sent me.
"REASON: What! you will convince me that God has sent you to bear
witness against himself? What sort of proofs will you adduce to convince
me that God speaks more surely by your mouth than through the understanding
he has given me?
"INSPIRATION: The understanding he has given you! Petty, conceited
creature! As if you were the first impious person who had been led astray
through his reason corrupted by sin.
"REASON: Man of God, you would not be the first scoundrel who asserts
his arrogance as a proof of his mission.
"INSPIRATION: What! do even philosophers call names?
"REASON: Sometimes, when the saints set them the example.
"INSPIRATION: Oh, but I have a right to do it, for I am speaking
on God's behalf.
"REASON: You would do well to show your credentials before you
make use of your privileges.
"INSPIRATION: My credentials are authentic, earth and heaven will
bear witness on my behalf. Follow my arguments carefully, if you please.
"REASON: Your arguments! You forget what you are saying. When you
teach me that my reason misleads me, do you not refute what it might
have said on your behalf? He who denies the right of reason, must convince
me without recourse to her aid. For suppose you have convinced me by
reason, how am I to know that it is not my reason, corrupted by sin,
which makes me accept what you say? besides, what proof, what demonstration,
can you advance, more self-evident than the axiom it is to destroy?
It is more credible that a good syllogism is a lie, than that the part
is greater than the whole.
"INSPIRATION: What a difference! There is no answer to my evidence;
it is of a supernatural kind.
"REASON: Supernatural! What do you mean by the word? I do not understand
it.
"INSPIRATION: I mean changes in the order of nature, prophecies,
signs, and wonders of every kind.
"REASON: Signs and wonders! I have never seen anything of the kind.
"INSPIRATION: Others have seen them for you. Clouds of witnesses--the
witness of whole nations....
"REASON: Is the witness of nations supernatural?
"INSPIRATION: No; but when it is unanimous, it is incontestable.
"REASON: There is nothing so incontestable as the principles of
reason, and one cannot accept an absurdity on human evidence. Once more,
let us see your supernatural evidence, for the consent of mankind is
not supernatural.
"INSPIRATION: Oh, hardened heart, grace does not speak to you.
"REASON: That is not my fault; for by your own showing, one must
have already received grace before one is able to ask for it. Begin
by speaking to me in its stead.
"INSPIRATION: But that is just what I am doing, and you will not
listen. But what do you say to prophecy?
"REASON: In the first place, I say I have no more heard a prophet
than I have seen a miracle. In the next, I say that no prophet could
claim authority over me.
"INSPIRATION: Follower of the devil! Why should not the words of
the prophets have authority over you?
"REASON: Because three things are required, three things which
will never happen: firstly, I must have heard the prophecy; secondly,
I must have seen its fulfilment; and thirdly, it must be clearly proved
that the fulfilment of the prophecy could not by any possibility have
been a mere coincidence; for even if it was as precise, as plain, and
clear as an axiom of geometry, since the clearness of a chance prediction
does not make its fulfilment impossible, this fulfilment when it does
take place does not, strictly speaking, prove what was foretold.
"See what your so-called supernatural proofs, your miracles, your
prophecies come to: believe all this upon the word of another, Submit
to the authority of men the authority of God which speaks to my reason.
If the eternal truths which my mind conceives of could suffer any shock,
there would be no sort of certainty for me; and far from being sure
that you speak to me on God's behalf, I should not even be sure that
there is a God.
"My child, here are difficulties enough, but these are not all.
Among so many religions, mutually excluding and proscribing each other,
one only is true, if indeed any one of them is true. To recognise the
true religion we must inquire into, not one, but all; and in any question
whatsoever we have no right to condemn unheard. [Footnote: On the other
hand, Plutarch relates that the Stoics maintained, among other strange
paradoxes, that it was no use hearing both sides; for, said they, the
first either proves his point or he does not prove it; if he has proved
it, there is an end of it, and the other should be condemned: if he
has not proved it, he himself is in the wrong and judgment should be
given against him. I consider the method of those who accept an exclusive
revelation very much like that of these Stoics. When each of them claims
to be the sole guardian of truth, we must hear them all before we can
choose between them without injustice.] The objections must be compared
with the evidence; we must know what accusation each brings against
the other, and what answers they receive. The plainer any feeling appears
to us, the more we must try to discover why so many other people refuse
to accept it. We should be simple, indeed, if we thought it enough to
hear the doctors on our own side, in order to acquaint ourselves with
the arguments of the other. Where can you find theologians who pride
themselves on their honesty? Where are those who, to refute the arguments
of their opponents, do not begin by making out that they are of little
importance? A man may make a good show among his own friends, and be
very proud of his arguments, who would cut a very poor figure with those
same arguments among those who are on the other side. Would you find
out for yourself from books? What learning you will need! What languages
you must learn; what libraries you must ransack; what an amount of reading
must be got through! Who will guide me in such a choice? It will be
hard to find the best books on the opposite side in any one country,
and all the harder to find those on all sides; when found they would
be easily answered. The absent are always in the wrong, and bad arguments
boldly asserted easily efface good arguments put forward with scorn.
Besides books are often very misleading, and scarcely express the opinions
of their authors. If you think you can judge the Catholic faith from
the writings of Bossuet, you will find yourself greatly mistaken when
you have lived among us. You will see that the doctrines with which
Protestants are answered are quite different from those of the pulpit.
To judge a religion rightly, you must not study it in the books of its
partisans, you must learn it in their lives; this is quite another matter.
Each religion has its own traditions, meaning, customs, prejudices,
which form the spirit of its creed, and must be taken in connection
with it.
"How many great nations neither print books of their own nor read
ours! How shall they judge of our opinions, or we of theirs? We laugh
at them, they despise us; and if our travellers turn them into ridicule,
they need only travel among us to pay us back in our own coin. Are there
not, in every country, men of common-sense, honesty, and good faith,
lovers of truth, who only seek to know what truth is that they may profess
it? Yet every one finds truth in his own religion, and thinks the religion
of other nations absurd; so all these foreign religions are not so absurd
as they seem to us, or else the reason we find for our own proves nothing.
"We have three principal forms of religion in Europe. One accepts
one revelation, another two, and another three. Each hates the others,
showers curses on them, accuses them of blindness, obstinacy, hardness
of heart, and falsehood. What fair-minded man will dare to decide between
them without first carefully weighing their evidence, without listening
attentively to their arguments? That which accepts only one revelation
is the oldest and seems the best established; that which accepts three
is the newest and seems the most consistent; that which accepts two
revelations and rejects the third may perhaps be the best, but prejudice
is certainly against it; its inconsistency is glaring.
"In all three revelations the sacred books are written in languages
unknown to the people who believe in them. The Jews no longer understand
Hebrew, the Christians understand neither Hebrew nor Greek; the Turks
and Persians do not understand Arabic, and the Arabs of our time do
not speak the language of Mahomet. Is not it a very foolish way of teaching,
to teach people in an unknown tongue? These books are translated, you
say. What an answer! How am I to know that the translations are correct,
or how am I to make sure that such a thing as a correct translation
is possible? If God has gone so far as to speak to men, why should he
require an interpreter?
"I can never believe that every man is obliged to know what is
contained in books, and that he who is out of reach of these books,
and of those who understand them, will be punished for an ignorance
which is no fault of his. Books upon books! What madness! As all Europe
is full of books, Europeans regard them as necessary, forgetting that
they are unknown throughout three-quarters of the globe. Were not all
these books written by men? Why then should a man need them to teach
him his duty, and how did he learn his duty before these books were
in existence? Either he must have learnt his duties for himself, or
his ignorance must have been excused.
"Our Catholics talk loudly of the authority of the Church; but
what is the use of it all, if they also need just as great an array
of proofs to establish that authority as the other seeks to establish
their doctrine? The Church decides that the Church has a right to decide.
What a well-founded authority! Go beyond it, and you are back again
in our discussions.
"Do you know many Christians who have taken the trouble to inquire
what the Jews allege against them? If any one knows anything at all
about it, it is from the writings of Christians. What a way of ascertaining
the arguments of our adversaries! But what is to be done? If any one
dared to publish in our day books which were openly in favour of the
Jewish religion, we should punish the author, publisher, and bookseller.
This regulation is a sure and certain plan for always being in the right.
It is easy to refute those who dare not venture to speak.
"Those among us who have the opportunity of talking with Jews are
little better off. These unhappy people feel that they are in our power;
the tyranny they have suffered makes them timid; they know that Christian
charity thinks nothing of injustice and cruelty; will they dare to run
the risk of an outcry against blasphemy? Our greed inspires us with
zeal, and they are so rich that they must be in the wrong. The more
learned, the more enlightened they are, the more cautious. You may convert
some poor wretch whom you have paid to slander his religion; you get
some wretched old-clothes-man to speak, and he says what you want; you
may triumph over their ignorance and cowardice, while all the time their
men of learning are laughing at your stupidity. But do you think you
would get off so easily in any place where they knew they were safe!
At the Sorbonne it is plain that the Messianic prophecies refer to Jesus
Christ. Among the rabbis of Amsterdam it is just as clear that they
have nothing to do with him. I do not think I have ever heard the arguments
of the Jews as to why they should not have a free state, schools and
universities, where they can speak and argue without danger. Then alone
can we know what they have to say.
"At Constantinople the Turks state their arguments, but we dare
not give ours; then it is our turn to cringe. Can we blame the Turks
if they require us to show the same respect for Mahomet, in whom we
do not believe, as we demand from the Jews with regard to Jesus Christ
in whom they do not believe? Are we right? On what grounds of justice
can we answer this question?
"Two-thirds of mankind are neither Jews, Mahometans, nor Christians;
and how many millions of men have never heard the name of Moses, Jesus
Christ, or Mahomet? They deny it; they maintain that our missionaries
go everywhere. That is easily said. But do they go into the heart of
Africa, still undiscovered, where as yet no European has ever ventured?
Do they go to Eastern Tartary to follow on horseback the wandering tribes,
whom no stranger approaches, who not only know nothing of the pope,
but have scarcely heard tell of the Grand Lama! Do they penetrate into
the vast continents of America, where there are still whole nations
unaware that the people of another world have set foot on their shores?
Do they go to Japan, where their intrigues have led to their perpetual
banishment, where their predecessors are only known to the rising generation
as skilful plotters who came with feigned zeal to take possession in
secret of the empire? Do they reach the harems of the Asiatic princes
to preach the gospel to those thousands of poor slaves? What have the
women of those countries done that no missionary may preach the faith
to them? Will they all go to hell because of their seclusion?
"If it were true that the gospel is preached throughout the world,
what advantage would there be? The day before the first missionary set
foot in any country, no doubt somebody died who could not hear him.
Now tell me what we shall do with him? If there were a single soul in
the whole world, to whom Jesus Christ had never been preached, this
objection would be as strong for that man as for a quarter of the human
race.
"If the ministers of the gospel have made themselves heard among
far-off nations, what have they told them which might reasonably be
accepted on their word, without further and more exact verification?
You preach to me God, born and dying, two thousand years ago, at the
other end of the world, in some small town I know not where; and you
tell me that all who have not believed this mystery are damned. These
are strange things to be believed so quickly on the authority of an
unknown person. Why did your God make these things happen so far off,
if he would compel me to know about them? Is it a crime to be unaware
of what is happening half a world away? Could I guess that in another
hemisphere there was a Hebrew nation and a town called Jerusalem? You
might as well expect me to know what was happening in the moon. You
say you have come to teach me; but why did you not come and teach my
father, or why do you consign that good old man to damnation because
he knew nothing of all this? Must he be punished everlastingly for your
laziness, he who was so kind and helpful, he who sought only for truth?
Be honest; put yourself in my place; see if I ought to believe, on your
word alone, all these incredible things which you have told me, and
reconcile all this injustice with the just God you proclaim to me. At
least allow me to go and see this distant land where such wonders, unheard
of in my own country, took place; let me go and see why the inhabitants
of Jerusalem put their God to death as a robber. You tell me they did
not know he was God. What then shall I do, I who have only heard of
him from you? You say they have been punished, dispersed, oppressed,
enslaved; that none of them dare approach that town. Indeed they richly
deserved it; but what do its present inhabitants say of their crime
in slaying their God! They deny him; they too refuse to recognise God
as God. They are no better than the children of the original inhabitants.
"What! In the very town where God was put to death, neither the
former nor the latter inhabitants knew him, and you expect that I should
know him, I who was born two thousand years after his time, and two
thousand leagues away? Do you not see that before I can believe this
book which you call sacred, but which I do not in the least understand,
I must know from others than yourself when and by whom it was written,
how it has been preserved, how it came into your possession, what they
say about it in those lands where it is rejected, and what are their
reasons for rejecting it, though they know as well as you what you are
telling me? You perceive I must go to Europe, Asia, Palestine, to examine
these things for myself; it would be madness to listen to you before
that.
"Not only does this seem reasonable to me, but I maintain that
it is what every wise man ought to say in similar circumstances; that
he ought to banish to a great distance the missionary who wants to instruct
and baptise him all of a sudden before the evidence is verified. Now
I maintain that there is no revelation against which these or similar
objections cannot be made, and with more force than against Christianity.
Hence it follows that if there is but one true religion and if every
man is bound to follow it under pain of damnation, he must spend his
whole life in studying, testing, comparing all these religions, in travelling
through the countries in which they are established. No man is free
from a man's first duty; no one has a right to depend on another's judgment.
The artisan who earns his bread by his daily toil, the ploughboy who
cannot read, the delicate and timid maiden, the invalid who can scarcely
leave his bed, all without exception must study, consider, argue, travel
over the whole world; there will be no more fixed and settled nations;
the whole earth will swarm with pilgrims on their way, at great cost
of time and trouble, to verify, compare,
Continua
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