登陆注册
15299900000063

第63章

Doubts had crept in, and the stoic was tempted to turn sceptic.Writing long after to Sir Gilbert Elliott in regard to his " Dialogues on Natural Religion," which sap all religion, be mentions a manuscript, afterwards destroyed, which he had written before twenty."It began with an anxious search after arguments to confirm the common opinion, doubts stole in, dissipated, returned, were again dissipated, returned again; and it was a perpetual struggle of a restless imagination against inclination, perhaps against reason."The letter is supposed by Mr.Burton, on good grounds, to have been written to the celebrated Dr.Cheyne, author of the Philosophical Principles of Natural Religion" (1705), and The English Malady; or a Treatise of Nervous Diseases of all kinds, Spleens, Vapours, Lowness of Spirits, Hypochondriacal {119} Distempers," &c.It is doubtful whether the letter ever reached Dr.Cheyne, and it may be doubted whether that eminent physician had in all his pharmacopoea a medicine to cure the malady of this remarkable youth.Dr.Cheyne defends with the common arguments the "great fundamental principles of all virtue and all morality: viz., the existence of a supreme and infinitely perfect Being; the freedom of the will, the immortality of the spirits of all intellectual beings, and the certainty of future rewards or punishments." But the youth who proposed to address him had already a system evolved which undermined all these.One could have wished that there had been a friend at hand to direct him away from Cicero, Seneca, and Plutarch, to a better teacher who is never mentioned.Not that we should have expected him in his then state to be drawn to the character of Jesus, but he might have found something in His work fitted to give peace and satisfaction to his distracted soul.But it is useless to speculate on these possibilities.All he says himself is:

" In 1734 I went to Bristol with some recommendations to eminent merchants, but in a few months found that scene totally unsuitable to me.I went over to France, with a view of prosecuting my studies in a country retreat, and I there laid that plan of life which I have steadily and successfully pursued."

We can easily picture the youth of twenty-three as he set out for France.By nature he is one of a class of persons to be found in all countries, but quite as frequently in Scotland as anywhere else, who are endowed with a powerful intellect, conjoined with a heavy animal temperament, and who, with no high aspirations, ideal, ethereal, or spiritual, have a tendency {120} to look with suspicion on all kinds of enthusiasm and highflown zeal.

With an understanding keen and searching, he could not be contented with the appearances of things, and was ever bent on penetrating beneath the surface; and his native shrewdness, his hereditary predilections, and the reaction against the heats of the previous century, all combined to lead him to question common impressions and popular opinions.He saw the difficulties which beset philosophical and theological investigations, and was unable to deliver himself from them, being without the high sentiments which might have lifted him above the low philosophy of his own day in England and France, and the sophistries suggested by a restless intellect.He knew only the ancient Stoic philosophy in the pages of Roman authors, and the modern philosophy of Locke, as modified by such men as Shaftesbury and Hutcheson, and driven to its logical consequences by Berkeley: he bad tried the one in his practical conduct, and the other by his sifting intellect, and having found both wanting, he is prepared to abandon himself to scepticism, which is the miserable desert resorted to by those who despair of truth.Meanwhile his great intellectual powers find employment in constructing theories of the mind, in which he himself perhaps had no great faith, but which seemed the logical conclusion of the acknowledged philosophical principles of his time, and quite as plausible as any that had been devised by others, and brought such fame to their authors.

With these predilections, France was the country which had most attractions to him, but was at the same time the most unfortunate country he could have gone to, and the middle of the eighteenth century the most unfortunate period for visiting it.In philosophy, the age had outgrown Descartes and Malebranche, Arnauld and Pascal, and the grave and earnest thinkers of the previous century, and was embracing the most superficial parts of Locke's philosophy, which had been introduced by Voltaire to the knowledge of Frenchmen, who turned it to a wretched sensationalism.In religion he saw around him, among the great mass of the people, a very corrupted and degenerate form of Christianity, while, among the educated classes, infidelity was privately cherished, and was ready to burst out.

Voltaire had issued his first attack on Christianity, {121}

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 亚洲的奥斯威辛:日军侵华集中营揭秘

    亚洲的奥斯威辛:日军侵华集中营揭秘

    二战时期,日本军国主义在亚洲的中国、朝鲜、泰国、缅甸、菲律宾、马来亚等地及日本本土建立了大批战俘劳工集中营。每个集中营都能写一部长长的日军残害战俘劳工的罪恶史,每个战俘劳工都能写一本厚厚的战俘生涯的苦难史。作者历经二十多年的调查取证,以揭秘的形式,把日军在亚洲、尤其是在中国的集中营中全体战俘劳工的苦难生活及斗争经历介绍给读者。让世人知道,亚洲有“奥斯维辛”,中国有“奥斯维辛”,正视历史,勿忘国耻。
  • 球宝

    球宝

    主人公凭借三个球宝,达到了人生巅峰。因为球宝的到来,他的命运彻底被改变。因为球宝,他知道了他所不知道的秘密。
  • 阴阳巫师:我和神仙有个约会

    阴阳巫师:我和神仙有个约会

    一夜之间,她成为了北宫家最后的阴阳巫师,一无所有,除了血海深仇,灭族之恨。按照策划者的剧本,她本应该从此一蹶不振,等着属于自己的命运到尽头的时候便好了。可是她却偏偏不想在逃,即便一无所有,去还是回来了。没钱,自己挣。没家,自己过。没人,自己睡。等等——说好的三无人员从哪里撩了一只有钱有房有车有长腿的神仙拐回了家呢?放开那只神仙,让我来。
  • 图腾燃烧

    图腾燃烧

    人生失意的少年纹身师林越意外穿越,谁知命运依旧坎坷,是低头臣服,还是昂首战斗?在这神奇的图腾大陆充满了无限的可能。治疗?我擅长!输出?不好意思我也会!悄悄告诉你,我还能防御!强力的天赋战技,牛掰的被动技能。别人只有一个图腾,林越笑了笑。不好意思,我有很多个。想学啊?我教你啊。。。
  • 医女农妃之娘子别和离

    医女农妃之娘子别和离

    【本文一对一宠文,爽文,男女主身心干净,龌蹉必报女PK闷骚男神,】论穿越的苦逼,医界新星前脚被人渣绿茶害,后脚被人塞后脚代嫁,给容貌尽毁腿脚残废的农夫。本要安安心心过日子,却想不到一句共妻,立马“和离!和离!和离!”重要的事情说三遍和离。医好夫君甩手和离,左手持空间诊所,右手经商闷声发财,势要成为望月国最富小富婆。芊芊佳人无靠山,歪瓜裂枣穷算计,阴谋诡计接踵来,她不怕!你玩阴她来毒,你玩谋她来狠,打的极品哇哇叫,算的恶人苦叫天,一手医术百人传。亲爹派人来寻回,不为亲情为让她在代嫁,靠当她好欺负,看我不扒了你们一家子的伪善皮。
  • 男仆你别跑

    男仆你别跑

    她是千百年一直游走各空间的时空修复者。遵照天命,守护空间平衡。强大如她,却有一个致命的弱点!他是武林排名第三的杀手,为了成全心中所爱,愿意一死。当他成为她的仆人,一切都改变了!一主一仆,她带他看到了一个完全不一样的世界。龙元,魔兽,女鬼……这场关于空间漏洞延续下来的战斗,还会继续下去!她问:为什么只有我无心?天道:因为你把它给了人!
  • 焚天玄帝

    焚天玄帝

    怒火焚遍诸天,将一切虚妄烧成虚无。冲破寰宇,成就不朽帝业!焚天玄帝,浩然来袭,精品佳作,尽情享用!
  • 阳光下的木子

    阳光下的木子

    都道是红颜祸水,寻常女子,此生得一君倾心便足矣。未曾想,她赫舍里梦薇豆蔻年华,怦然心动,便以为他是一生归宿,谁料这常清劫却让人丢了男儿驱;那年杏花微雨,浅步回眸便叫人难以忘怀,又是一个叫阮宁远的人终了性命;不是所有爱都予之默默,岁月如歌,博果尔浓情似酒。桃花罪,她又该何去何从?时光荏苒,岁月变迁,沉淀下来的到底是临福还是遇祸?
  • 黄箓破狱灯仪

    黄箓破狱灯仪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 那些年不完整的岁月叫青春

    那些年不完整的岁月叫青春

    我,一个大学生,讲述从初一开始的青春岁月,爱情,友情,亲情,