登陆注册
18989900000460

第460章

Nothing, then, can be more natural than that a person endowed with sensibility and imagination should entertain a respectful and affectionate feeling towards those great men with whose minds he holds daily communion. Yet nothing can be more certain than that such men have not always deserved to be regarded with respect or affection. Some writers, whose works will continue to instruct and delight mankind to the remotest ages, have been placed in such situations that their actions and motives are as well known to us as the actions and motives of one human being can be known to another; and unhappily their conduct has not always been such as an impartial judge can contemplate with approbation. But the fanaticism of the devout worshipper of genius is proof against all evidence and all argument. The character of his idol is matter of faith; and the province of faith is not to be invaded by reason. He maintains his superstition with a credulity as boundless, and a zeal as unscrupulous, as can be found in the most ardent partisans of religious or political factions. The most decisive proofs are rejected; the plainest rules of morality are explained away; extensive and important portions of history are completely distorted. The enthusiast misrepresents facts with all the effrontery of an advocate, and confounds right and wrong with all the dexterity of a Jesuit; and all this only in order that some man who has been in his grave during many ages may have a fairer character than he deserves.

Middleton's Life of Cicero is a striking instance of the influence of this sort of partiality. Never was there a character which it was easier to read than that of Cicero. Never was there a mind keener or more critical than that of Middleton. Had the biographer brought to the examination of his favourite statesman's conduct but a very small part of the acuteness and severity which he displayed when he was engaged in investigating the high pretensions of Epiphanius and Justin Martyr, he could not have failed to produce a most valuable history of a most interesting portion of time. But this most ingenious and learned man, though "So wary held and wise That, as 'twas said, he scarce received For gospel what the church believed," had a superstition of his own. The great Iconoclast was himself an idolater. The great Avvocato del Diavolo, while he disputed, with no small ability, the claims of Cyprian and Athanasius to a place in the Calendar, was himself composing a lying legend in honour of St. Tully. He was holding up as a model of every virtue a man whose talents and acquirements, indeed, can never be too highly extolled, and who was by no means destitute of amiable qualities, but whose whole soul was under the dominion of a girlish vanity and a craven fear. Actions for which Cicero himself, the most eloquent and skilful of advocates, could contrive no excuse, actions which in his confidential correspondence he mentioned with remorse and shame, are represented by his biographer as wise, virtuous, heroic. The whole history of that great revolution which overthrew the Roman aristocracy, the whole state of parties, the character of every public man, is elaborately misrepresented, in order to make out something which may look like a defence of one most eloquent and accomplished trimmer.

The volume before us reminds us now and then of the Life of Cicero. But there is this marked difference. Dr. Middleton evidently had an uneasy consciousness of the weakness of his cause, and therefore resorted to the most disingenuous shifts, to unpardonable distortions and suppressions of facts. Mr. Montagu's faith is sincere and implicit. He practises no trickery. He conceals nothing. He puts the facts before us in the full confidence that they will produce on our minds the effect which they have produced on his own. It is not till he comes to reason from facts to motives that his partiality shows itself; and then he leaves Middleton himself far behind. His work proceeds on the assumption that Bacon was an eminently virtuous man. From the tree Mr. Montagu judges of the fruit. He is forced to relate many actions which, if any man but Bacon had committed them, nobody would have dreamed of defending, actions which are readily and completely explained by supposing Bacon to have been a man whose principles were not strict, and whose spirit was not high, actions which can be explained in no other way without resorting to some grotesque hypothesis for which there is not a tittle of evidence. But any hypothesis is, in Mr. Montagu's opinion, more probable than that his hero should ever have done anything very wrong.

This mode of defending Bacon seems to us by no means Baconian. To take a man's character for granted, and then from his character to infer the moral quality of all his actions, is surely a process the very reverse of that which is recommended in the Novum Organum. Nothing, we are sure, could have led Mr. Montagu to depart so far from his master's precepts, except zeal for his master's honour. We shall follow a different course. We shall attempt, with the valuable assistance which Mr. Montagu has afforded us, to frame such an account of Bacon's life as may enable our readers correctly to estimate his character.

It is hardly necessary to say that Francis Bacon was the son of Sir Nicholas Bacon, who held the great seal of England during the first twenty years of the reign of Elizabeth. The fame of the father has been thrown into shade by that of the son. But Sir Nicholas was no ordinary man. He belonged to a set of men whom it is easier to describe collectively than separately, whose minds were formed by one system of discipline, who belonged to one rank in society, to one university, to one party, to one sect, to one administration, and who resembled each other so much in talents, in opinions, in habits, in fortunes, that one character, we had almost said one life, may, to a considerable extent, serve for them all.

同类推荐
  • 书湖州庄氏史狱

    书湖州庄氏史狱

    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。
  • 词苑萃编

    词苑萃编

    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。
  • 花里活

    花里活

    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。
  • camellia girl

    camellia girl

    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。
  • 四十二章经注

    四十二章经注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 沉醉夜色

    沉醉夜色

    街道上,人来人往,即繁华也热闹。但就是这样,五光十色的光景的会让你错失一点东西,是什么?在你不注意的时候或许你不曾发现,在街角的转角处,开了一间不起眼的小店,没有醒目的指示,没有炫色的招牌,它只是静静的存在着。当你偶尔的经过时,也只会看到门边挂上一块木色的牌子上写着---OPEN。只有当你去推门的那一刹那,你才知道这店的名字---沉醉夜色。伴随着门的启开,“叮铃叮铃“的铃声刚响起,一张如阳光般灿烂的帅脸旋即出现在你的眼前。“欢迎光临。”九九的群落--夜色天下(21995564),欢迎踩踏!!
  • 鸿蒙再辟

    鸿蒙再辟

    神死仙绝妖灭魔尽、这一切的起因是什么?谁主导这一切。从最初的科技文明到达顶峰时开始造神,从此拉开了四个文明轮流交替的序幕、神道文明、仙道文明、武道文明、科技文明,轮流交替无数年竟无人超脱。幸存者苟延残喘,内有天使族与神之一族屠杀各界生灵、抽取生命之源。而外则是各个宇宙到了尽头,又到了毁灭重生的时刻,如果抽取生命之源过多各个宇宙会加速毁灭、重生无望,看猪脚如何自救、救人,可会超脱?
  • 爆宠萌妃:娘子求亲亲

    爆宠萌妃:娘子求亲亲

    21实际第一杀手被追杀,竟然穿越了?还是个废柴,身上灵力全无。。。。。。睁开眼,她已不是以前的那个他,我要活出一个精彩的人生!之后她遇到他,他一席白衣,神似妖孽,居然是帝国的四王爷。他护她,宠她,即使倾尽一切只为博她一笑。他缠着她,天,不是说四王爷有洁癖吗,那我眼前这个男人是谁?----疯子精心制作,q群:306943871敲门砖:疯子。管理员是疯子小号。欢迎骚扰-0-
  • 逍遥魔使

    逍遥魔使

    假冒的“魔族王子”身负重任来到人界,又摇身一变被人族皇帝任命为帝国使者出使各国,游历四方
  • 神之太初

    神之太初

    茫茫宇宙,无尽黑暗。亿万恒星,散发着黯淡昏黄的光,它们被黑暗围剿着,仿佛荒原上的一粒粒萤火,只能臣服于黑暗君王座下,亿万载供其驱使。千年,万年,亿万年……宇宙永远黑暗着、静止着,似乎也将永恒静止下去。然而,随着那一天的到来,这似乎永恒不变的一幕,终于被打破。打破宇宙寂静的,是一道不知从何而来的流光。一人、一兽、一枪。人俊朗而愤怒,兽神圣而炽烈,枪冰冷而锋锐。……宇宙迎来了新的篇章。
  • 娇妻撩人:别惹危险总裁

    娇妻撩人:别惹危险总裁

    她从来没有想过在这场大冒险中,他们已注定了一场至死不休的纠缠。他是商业帝国的王,是安城不可小觑的霸主,翻手为云覆手为雨,他锐不可当,势在必得,果断决绝,然而在这光鲜的背后暗藏着另一个秘密。他宠她,宠到极致。原本以为携手一生,却在某一天,他决然将她推开,看着他拥着别的女人,她心如死灰,终是转身离开。再见,已是三年后……
  • 异海2

    异海2

    20世纪80年代,一个立下战功的军人吴××接到国家指派的神秘任务:化名曹沧,参与一个中美合作的物理实验。这个实验的目的是尝试进入另外一个空间——异海。随着中美联合实验在诡秘异海的展开,一系列离奇惊险的状况不断发生,苏联也派遣了核潜艇尾随中美联合科考队进入了异海。三个国家的科考人员,面对诡异的异海,不得不选择合作,却又各怀心事,暗中谋取自己国家的最大利益。当这些科考人员渐渐产生友谊,准备共同完成实验的时候,他们发现,异海已经有人先行一步。更多神秘事件的谜团慢慢浮出水面:末日黎明计划、罗布泊实验、彭加木失踪事件、大西洲和平行世界异海的关系、人类的真正“祖先”……
  • 道灵天下

    道灵天下

    有修仙小派古罗宗,建宗于上古超级门派佛门雷音寺废墟之上。所属一小国出一少年黄岩,其少逢大变,病体阴噩,命魂有缺。拜师野道人,误打误撞,以万毒盅,草木精,引天雷地火以叙命。其师回归太天大陆后,黄岩为求雷音寺地藏明王决根治病体,进入古罗宗开始另一番修仙征程...。
  • 李叔同的凡世禅心

    李叔同的凡世禅心

    李叔同是一位艺术修养全面的艺术家、诗、词、书画、篆刻、音乐、戏剧、文学颇有造诣的才子。在俗39年,在佛24年,谜一样的李叔同留给世人的是无尽的感慨和话题。本书内容包括:吟到夕阳山外山,古今谁免余情绕;度量如海涵春肓,气概如乔岳泰山;宁肯抱香枝上老,不随黄叶舞秋风等。
  • 傲视修罗王

    傲视修罗王

    天元大陆,南风帝国,欧阳家大院中人声鼎沸热闹非凡,丫鬟,奴才忙得不亦乐乎,一个威严的中年人在庭院中徘徊走动,不时望向紧闭的大门,忽然只见天空中雷光点点,只听见轰轰几道紫雷向下劈来,那紫雷如一条百丈巨龙在墨云中闪现了一下就消失了-----欧阳家沉浸在喜得贵子的气氛中,此时那风帝国皇宫中,威严的国王问国师:“国师你怎么看刚才的天空异象?”国师摇头沉声道:“陛下,刚才天空异象我也不知道,如何解释。”···········“少爷,少爷你等等老奴!”张叔我看见前面美女了我先去了!········