登陆注册
37719800000017

第17章

Age enfeebles character; it is a tree that produces only degenerate fruit, but the fruit is always of the same nature; it is knotted and covered with moss, it becomes worm-eaten, but it is always oak or pear tree.If one could change one's character, one would give oneself one, one would be master of nature.Can one give oneself anything? do we not receive everything?

Try to animate an indolent man with a continued activity; to freeze with apathy the boiling soul of an impetuous fellow, to inspire someone who has neither ear nor taste with a taste for music and poetry, you will no more succeed than if you undertook to give sight to a man born blind.We perfect, we soften, we conceal what nature has put in us, but we do not put in ourselves anything at all.

One says to a farmer: "You have too many fish in this pond, they will not prosper; there are too many cattle in your meadows, grass lacks, they will grow thin." It happens after this exhortation that the pikes eat half my man's carp, and the wolves the half of his sheep; the rest grow fat.

Will he congratulate himself on his economy? This countryman, it is you;one of your passions has devoured the others, and you think you have triumphed over yourself.Do not nearly all of us resemble that old general of ninety who, having met some young officers who were debauching themselves with some girls, says to them angrily: "Gentlemen, is that the example I give you?"Philosophical Dictionary: Charlatan CHARLATAN THE article entitled "Charlatan" in the "Encyclopedic Dictionary" is filled with useful truths agreeably presented.The Chevalier de Jaucourt has there presented the charlatanry of medicine.

We will take the liberty of adding here a few reflections.The abode of the doctors is in the large towns; there are barely any doctors in the country.It is in the great towns that the rich invalids are; debauchery, the excesses of the table, the passions, are the cause of their maladies.

Dumoulin, not the lawyer, the doctor, who was as good a practician as the other, said as he was dying, that he left two great doctors behind him, diet and river water.

In 1728, in the time of Law, the most famous charlatan of the first species, another, Villars by name, confided to some friends that his uncle who had lived nearly a hundred years, and who died only by accident, had left him the secret of a water which could easily prolong life to a hundred and fifty years, provided a man was temperate.When he saw a funeral pass, he shrugged his shoulders in pity; if the defunct, he observed, had drunk my water, he would not be where he is.His friends to whom he gave generously of the water, and who observed the prescribed regime in some degree, thrived on it and praised it.He then sold the bottle for six francs; the sale was prodigious.It was water from the Seine with a little nitre.Those who took it and who subjected themselves to a certain amount of regime, above all those who were born with a good constitution, recovered perfect health in a few days.He said to the others: "It is your fault if you are not entirely cured: correct these two vices and you will live at least a hundred and fifty years."Some of them reformed; this good charlatan's fortune increased like his reputation.The Abbe de Pons, the enthusiast, put him far above the Marechal de Villars: "The Marechal kills men," he said to him, "but you make them live."People learned at last that Villars Water was only river water; they would have no more of it; and went to other charlatans.

It is certain that he had done good, and that the only reproach one could make against him was that he had sold Seine water a little too dear.

He led men to temperance by which fact he was superior to the apothecary Arnoult, who stuffed Europe with his satchets against apoplexy, without recommending any virtue.

I knew in London a doctor named Brown, who practised in Barbadoes.He had a sugar refinery and negroes; he was robbed of a considerable sum;he assembled his negroes: "My lads," he said to them, "the great serpent appeared to me during the night, he told me that the thief would at this moment have a parrot's feather on the end of his nose." The guilty man promptly put his hand to his nose."It is you who robbed me," said the master; "the great serpent has just told me so." And he regained his money.

One can hardly condemn such a charlatanry; but one must be dealing with negroes.

Scipio Africanus, this great Scipio very different otherwise from Dr.

Brown, willingly made his soldiers believe that he was inspired by the gods.This great charlatanry was long the custom.Can one blame Scipio to have availed himself of it? he was the man who perhaps did most honour to the Roman Republic; but why did the gods inspire him not to render his accounts?

Numa did better; it was necessary to police some brigands and a senate which was the most difficult section of these brigands to govern.If he had proposed his laws to the assembled tribes, the assassins of his predecessor would have made a thousand difficulties.He addressed himself to the goddess Egeria, who gave him some pandects from Jupiter; he was obeyed without contradiction, and he reigned happily.His instructions were good, his charlatanry did good; but if some secret enemy had discovered the imposture, if he had said: "Exterminate an impostor who prostitutes the name of the gods in order to deceive men," Numa ran the risk of being sent to heaven with Romulus.

It is probable that Numa took his measures very carefully, and that he deceived the Romans for their benefit, with a dexterity suitable to the time, the place, the intelligence of the early Romans.

同类推荐
  • 疡科纲要

    疡科纲要

    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。
  • 廉明公案

    廉明公案

    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。
  • Jewel

    Jewel

    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。
  • 知言

    知言

    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。
  • Under Western Eyes

    Under Western Eyes

    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
  • 绝世爱恋:少爷的乖乖女孩

    绝世爱恋:少爷的乖乖女孩

    还记得在那个初秋,他们再次相遇,他们都忘记了彼此,世界上最痛苦的距离是我们就站在对方的身旁,却苦苦寻找着对方。第一次见面的时候,她微笑着对他说:“顾黎轩,你好,我是墨晗希。”他们都没想到,对面的人是苦苦寻找了许久的人。有一天,她成了他的妹妹,他和她一起上学,一起吃饭,朝夕相处。他对她很好,简直是胜似亲人。可就是这样的一个天使一般的男孩,为了她变成了一个宁愿伤害自己也要对她好的恶魔一般的男孩。爱对了是爱情,爱错了是青春,那他们这到底是爱情,还是青春?(求推荐票,求评论)一个星期80+推荐票加更,200收藏加更,40评论加更~~为了感谢各位,会经常有活动哦。
  • 大道代理人

    大道代理人

    大道破碎,因果混乱,法则衰弱,暗潮涌动。不知从何时开始,“系统……穿越……重生……逆天……”成为了“主角”们的代名词。对此,身为大道代理人的林尘不做解释,噼里啪啦,拳头奉上:“老子让你逆天,老子让你命不由天,天惹你了是吧,是吧!”这是一个苦逼的“天道打工仔”游历三千世界,为大道清理门户的故事……(侠肝义胆沈剑心、尸兄、超神学院、斗破苍穹动漫版……)
  • 倚阑干

    倚阑干

    填词何须追平仄,放眼路千条,小趣可寻,大义不改,漫步也昭昭;淡暮月下说情话,覆手斩英豪,痴心难改,老生常谈,与君共嘲嘲。
  • 动物修仙界

    动物修仙界

    “我叫含含,是只兔妖,不记得过去,也看不清未来,最神奇的是得到了一个宝贝,希望真的可以凭它成仙,要是不行的话也没有关系,反正我有很多时间”“我叫莫卡,是只狼,拥有不可磨灭的过去,明白自己生存的意义,喜欢的东西一生只有含含,只是没有太多的时间,无法伸手留住她”
  • 斗罗之美录美坦

    斗罗之美录美坦

    作为广大穿越者的一员,我的武魂竟然是宝可梦中的美录美坦?!
  • 王妃别跑:腹黑王爷不好惹

    王妃别跑:腹黑王爷不好惹

    不过是不小心从楼梯上摔下去了,结果代价好大好大,竟然魂穿到了一个历史毫无记载的国家――夜魅国,还负在了一个大花痴身上!!!刚过去就要顶着原主的脸嫁给腹黑王爷。不行!坚决不行!一次次逃脱,又被一次次寻回,本以为无念,结果却生了情……
  • 永恒征尘

    永恒征尘

    我会忍受所有的寂寞,也会感叹时光的蹉跎;你的眼泪像一颗琥珀,融化了这世间的落寞;爱像一片宽阔的湖泊,拯救生命干枯的沙丘;相爱更像是致命邂逅,就让我不知天高地厚!
  • 秦徽怜

    秦徽怜

    “就因为我是通过白川才能在你身边你就这么对我?你对我有过一点真心吗?哈哈……是啊,冷酷,无情,残忍,弑父杀兄的江罪,对我,很仁慈了。”秦徽怜转身跑出窗外。没人会知道,那个冷酷无情的魔鬼一夜间老了十岁。没人知道踩着人头上位的魔鬼死在自己的婚房,也不会有人会懂这个魔鬼的心。
  • 零零后的征战之旅

    零零后的征战之旅

    地球资源枯竭,人类放弃地球不可实现,改造其他星球遥遥无期,最后人们决定:为伟大的地球母亲献上资源地。 第一个世界红楼梦
  • 亡国志

    亡国志

    突然改变的命运,从神坛跌落谷底的皇子,朝野风云诡谲,家国动荡,终是成也萧何,败也萧何。