登陆注册
18983200000035

第35章

Cardan's sad life, and that of Cornelius Agrippa, you can, and ought to read for yourselves, in two admirable biographies, as amusing as they are learned, by Professor Morley, of the London University. Ihave not chosen either of them as a subject for this lecture, because Mr. Morley has so exhausted what is to be known about them, that I could tell you nothing which I had not stolen from him.

But what shall I say of the most famous of these men--Paracelsus?

whose name you surely know. He too has been immortalised in a poem which you all ought to have read, one of Robert Browning's earliest and one of his best creations.

I think we must accept as true Mr. Browning's interpretation of Paracelsus's character. We must believe that he was at first an honest and high-minded, as he was certainly a most gifted, man; that he went forth into the world, with an intense sense of the worthlessness of the sham knowledge of the pedants and quacks of the schools; an intense belief that some higher and truer science might be discovered, by which diseases might be actually cured, and health, long life, happiness, all but immortality, be conferred on man; an intense belief that he, Paracelsus, was called and chosen by God to find out that great mystery, and be a benefactor to all future ages. That fixed idea might degenerate--did, alas!

degenerate--into wild self-conceit, rash contempt of the ancients, violent abuse of his opponents. But there was more than this in Paracelsus. He had one idea to which, if he had kept true, his life would have been a happier one--the firm belief that all pure science was a revelation from God; that it was not to be obtained at second or third hand, by blindly adhering to the words of Galen or Hippocrates or Aristotle, and putting them (as the scholastic philosophers round him did) in the place of God: but by going straight to nature at first hand, and listening to what Bacon calls "the voice of God revealed in facts." True and noble is the passage with which he begins his "Labyrinthus Medicorum," one of his attacks on the false science of his day,"The first and highest book of all healing," he says, "is called wisdom, and without that book no man will carry out anything good or useful . . . And that book is God Himself. For in Him alone who hath created all things, the knowledge and principle of all things dwells . . . without Him all is folly. As the sun shines on us from above, so He must pour into us from above all arts whatsoever.

Therefore the root of all learning and cognition is, that we should seek first the kingdom of God--the kingdom of God in which all sciences are founded . . . If any man think that nature is not founded on the kingdom of God, he knows nothing about it. All gifts," he repeats again and again, confused and clumsily (as is his wont), but with a true earnestness, "are from God."The true man of science, with Paracelsus, is he who seeks first the kingdom of God in facts, investigating nature reverently, patiently, in faith believing that God, who understands His own work best, will make him understand it likewise. The false man of science is he who seeks the kingdom of this world, who cares nothing about the real interpretation of facts: but is content with such an interpretation as will earn him the good things of this world--the red hat and gown, the ambling mule, the silk clothes, the partridges, capons, and pheasants, the gold florins chinking in his palm. At such pretenders Paracelsus sneered, at last only too fiercely, not only as men whose knowledge consisted chiefly in wearing white gloves, but as rogues, liars, villains, and every epithet which his very racy vocabulary, quickened (it is to be feared) by wine and laudanum, could suggest. With these he contrasts the true men of science. It is difficult for us now to understand how a man setting out in life with such pure and noble views should descend at last (if indeed he did descend) to be a quack and a conjuror--and die under the imputation that Bombastes kept a devil's bird Hid in the pommel of his sword, and have, indeed, his very name, Bombast, used to this day as a synonym of loud, violent, and empty talk. To understand it at all, we must go back and think a little over these same occult sciences which were believed in by thousands during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries.

The reverence for classic antiquity, you must understand, which sprang up at the renaissance in the fifteenth century, was as indiscriminating as it was earnest. Men caught the trash as well as the jewels. They put the dreams of the Neoplatonists, Iamblicus, Porphyry, or Plotinus, or Proclus, on the same level as the sound dialectic philosophy of Plato himself. And these Neoplatonists were all, more or less, believers in magic--Theurgy, as it was called--in the power of charms and spells, in the occult virtues of herbs and gems, in the power of adepts to evoke and command spirits, in the significance of dreams, in the influence of the stars upon men's characters and destinies. If the great and wise philosopher Iamblicus believed such things, why might not the men of the sixteenth century?

And so grew up again in Europe a passion for what were called the Occult sciences. It had always been haunting the European imagination. Mediaeval monks had long ago transformed the poet Virgil into a great necromancer. And there were immense excuses for such a belief. There was a mass of collateral evidence that the occult sciences were true, which it was impossible then to resist.

同类推荐
  • 普照禅师修心诀

    普照禅师修心诀

    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。
  • Childhood

    Childhood

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 尧山堂偶隽

    尧山堂偶隽

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 台湾私法债权编

    台湾私法债权编

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 闲中今古录摘抄

    闲中今古录摘抄

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 摇响青春的风铃(英文爱藏双语系列)

    摇响青春的风铃(英文爱藏双语系列)

    《摇响青春的风铃》带你品味那如水的青春。作为双语读物,《摇响青春的风铃》为中英双语对照版,既是英语学习爱好者、文学爱好者的必备读物,也是忙碌现代人的一片憩息心灵的家园,让读者在欣赏原法原味和凝练生动的英文时,还能多角度、深层次地品读语言特色与艺术之美。
  • 一剑封天

    一剑封天

    踏过今世,寻过异世。纵剑一挥,蔽日封天。众神寂灭,我主乾坤!一个众神的封印,一个人皇之印,万古流传的终结。谢茗羽,从天之涯继承万古皇者之力,却不想本源早已不复!
  • 在哈佛听到的12堂幸福课

    在哈佛听到的12堂幸福课

    本着世界上最真诚的心,马银春编写了这本有关幸福的小书:《在哈佛听到的12堂幸福课》。如果你是个渴望幸福追求成功的人,那么请轻轻地翻翻这本充满温情的《在哈佛听到的12堂幸福课》吧。倘若你能够从中寻找到幸福的感觉,那么我的心也会由衷地欣慰。倘若你能够从中寻找到走向成功的方法,那么我会由衷地恭喜你。
  • 网游之疯狂回归

    网游之疯狂回归

    天煞孤星,一心为爱,化身狂魔,只为一人,技压群雄,后宫无敌,弹指一瞬,沧海尽变。当然以上和本文没有啥关系。本文讲述的只是一个普通学生的简单游戏生涯,真的是普通学生?真的是简单游戏生涯?当然一切都在书中,怎么说的尽道的明呢?
  • 异界灵球

    异界灵球

    灵球,万星年间才形成的宇宙仙灵体,召唤圣兽的仙灵体。一位拥有三颗灵球的异界君主,为救其子民国土,在明暗大战中,毁其肉体,封印灵球,剩其残魂。地球上,一度落寞的高中少年,受尽冷眼嘲讽,有幸结识残魂,并开始一段异界之旅。
  • 与魔同寝

    与魔同寝

    索嘉琪,一天之内,她差点被车撞到,好友反目成仇,亲亲男友背叛了自己……而这一些都是拜一个叫聂齐枫的人所赐。卑鄙的逼使她成为他的仆人,伺候他大少爷,当她带着仅有的自尊逃出他的地地盘时,老天竟然又给她开了个天大的玩笑,被逼的相亲对象竟然是他。对上父亲那贪婪的面孔,他毫不犹豫的答应了父亲的请求。像个被玩弄的小丑一样她又落到那个恶魔的手里,霸道的把她禁锢在身边。
  • 宠妻如命:错惹首席设计师
  • 冰山公主与冷傲王子

    冰山公主与冷傲王子

    他,帅气,冷漠,讨厌花痴。她,美丽,冷酷,讨厌草痴。面对他的不信任,她果断的选择放手、离开,知道真相后,他后悔,他满世界的寻找她。对于他的寻找,她不是不知道,而是选择无视。两年后,她华丽回归,究竟她会不会原谅他呢?
  • 乱世凌神域

    乱世凌神域

    少年出自武极大陆中一个普通家族,从小便无父无母,仅有祖父,祖母两位至亲,相守相依,也算无忧无虑直到一天,少年外出而归,却见家族满目痤疮,族中无一幸存之人,就连唯一两位至亲也倒在血泊之中,只留下一块紫玉,与墙壁上一个用血迹绘画的“无”子,被少年当做唯一的依存,从此少年走向艰难的复仇之路,一路披荆斩棘,踏上主宰之路
  • 废柴不废复仇夺夫

    废柴不废复仇夺夫

    这是哪里?怎么我会感觉到浑身疼痛?难道我南宫凌薇到了冷宫不成?竟有人这么狠狠打我?......穿越异世,竟然无奇穿越到一个废柴大小姐的身上,废柴?睁大你们的狗眼看清楚了,此南宫凌薇非彼南宫凌薇!