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<h2> CHAPTER L——OF DEMOCRITUS AND HERACLITUS </h2>
<p>The judgment is an utensil proper for all subjects, and will have an oar
in everything: which is the reason, that in these Essays I take hold of
all occasions where, though it happen to be a subject I do not very well
understand, I try, however, sounding it at a distance, and finding it too
deep for my stature, I keep me on the shore; and this knowledge that a man
can proceed no further, is one effect of its virtue, yes, one of those of
which it is most proud. One while in an idle and frivolous subject, I try
to find out matter whereof to compose a body, and then to prop and support
it; another while, I employ it in a noble subject, one that has been
tossed and tumbled by a thousand hands, wherein a man can scarce possibly
introduce anything of his own, the way being so beaten on every side that
he must of necessity walk in the steps of another: in such a case, 'tis
the work of the judgment to take the way that seems best, and of a
thousand paths, to determine that this or that is the best. I leave the
choice of my arguments to fortune, and take that she first presents to me;
they are all alike to me, I never design to go through any of them; for I
never see all of anything: neither do they who so largely promise to show
it others. Of a hundred members and faces that everything has, I take one,
onewhile to look it over only, another while to ripple up the skin, and
sometimes to pinch it to the bones: I give a stab, not so wide but as deep
as I can, and am for the most part tempted to take it in hand by some new
light I discover in it. Did I know myself less, I might perhaps venture to
handle something or other to the bottom, and to be deceived in my own
inability; but sprinkling here one word and there another, patterns cut
from several pieces and scattered without design and without engaging
myself too far, I am not responsible for them, or obliged to keep close to
my subject, without varying at my own liberty and pleasure, and giving up
myself to doubt and uncertainty, and to my own governing method,
ignorance.</p>
<p>All motion discovers us: the very same soul of Caesar, that made itself so
conspicuous in marshalling and commanding the battle of Pharsalia, was
also seen as solicitous and busy in the softer affairs of love and
leisure. A man makes a judgment of a horse, not only by seeing him when he
is showing off his paces, but by his very walk, nay, and by seeing him
stand in the stable.</p>
<p>Amongst the functions of the soul, there are some of a lower and meaner
form; he who does not see her in those inferior offices as well as in
those of nobler note, never fully discovers her; and, peradventure, she is
best shown where she moves her simpler pace. The winds of passions take
most hold of her in her highest flights; and the rather by reason that she
wholly applies herself to, and exercises her whole virtue upon, every
particular subject, and never handles more than one thing at a time, and
that not according to it, but according to herself. Things in respect to
themselves have, peradventure, their weight, measures, and conditions; but
when we once take them into us, the soul forms them as she pleases. Death
is terrible to Cicero, coveted by Cato, indifferent to Socrates. Health,
conscience, authority, knowledge, riches, beauty, and their contraries,
all strip themselves at their entering into us, and receive a new robe,
and of another fashion, from the soul; and of what colour, brown, bright,
green, dark, and of what quality, sharp, sweet, deep, or superficial, as
best pleases each of them, for they are not agreed upon any common
standard of forms, rules, or proceedings; every one is a queen in her own
dominions. Let us, therefore, no more excuse ourselves upon the external
qualities of things; it belongs to us to give ourselves an account of
them. Our good or ill has no other dependence but on ourselves. 'Tis there
that our offerings and our vows are due, and not to fortune she has no
power over our manners; on the contrary, they draw and make her follow in
their train, and cast her in their own mould. Why should not I judge of
Alexander at table, ranting and drinking at the prodigious rate he
sometimes used to do?</p>
<p>Or, if he played at chess? what string of his soul was not touched by this
idle and childish game? I hate and avoid it, because it is not play
enough, that it is too grave and serious a diversion, and I am ashamed to
lay out as much thought and study upon it as would serve to much better
uses. He did not more pump his brains about his glorious expedition into
the Indies, nor than another in unravelling a passage upon which depends
the safety of mankind. To what a degree does this ridiculous diversion
molest the soul, when all her faculties are summoned together upon this
trivial account! and how fair an opportunity she herein gives every one to
know and to make a right judgment of himself? I do not more thoroughly
sift myself in any other posture than this: what passion are we exempted
from in it? Anger, spite, malice, impatience, and a vehement desire of
getting the better in a concern wherein it were more excusable to be
ambitious of being overcome; for to be eminent, to excel above the common
rate in frivolous things, nowise befits a man of honour. What I say in
this example may be said in all others. Every particle, every employment
of man manifests him equally with any other.</p>
<p>Democritus and Heraclitus were two philosophers, of whom the first,
finding human condition ridiculous and vain, never appeared abroad but
with a jeering and laughing countenance; whereas Heraclitus commiserating
that same condition of ours, appeared always with a sorrowful look, and
tears in his eyes:</p>
<p>"Alter<br/>
Ridebat, quoties a limine moverat unum<br/>
Protuleratque pedem; flebat contrarius alter."<br/>
["The one always, as often as he had stepped one pace from his<br/>
threshold, laughed, the other always wept."—Juvenal, Sat., x. 28.]<br/>
[Or, as Voltaire: "Life is a comedy to those who think;<br/>
a tragedy to those who feel." D.W.]<br/></p>
<p>I am clearly for the first humour; not because it is more pleasant to
laugh than to weep, but because it expresses more contempt and
condemnation than the other, and I think we can never be despised
according to our full desert. Compassion and bewailing seem to imply some
esteem of and value for the thing bemoaned; whereas the things we laugh at
are by that expressed to be of no moment. I do not think that we are so
unhappy as we are vain, or have in us so much malice as folly; we are not
so full of mischief as inanity; nor so miserable as we are vile and mean.
And therefore Diogenes, who passed away his time in rolling himself in his
tub, and made nothing of the great Alexander, esteeming us no better than
flies or bladders puffed up with wind, was a sharper and more penetrating,
and, consequently in my opinion, a juster judge than Timon, surnamed the
Man-hater; for what a man hates he lays to heart. This last was an enemy
to all mankind, who passionately desired our ruin, and avoided our
conversation as dangerous, proceeding from wicked and depraved natures:
the other valued us so little that we could neither trouble nor infect him
by our example; and left us to herd one with another, not out of fear, but
from contempt of our society: concluding us as incapable of doing good as
evil.</p>
<p>Of the same strain was Statilius' answer, when Brutus courted him into the
conspiracy against Caesar; he was satisfied that the enterprise was just,
but he did not think mankind worthy of a wise man's concern'; according to
the doctrine of Hegesias, who said, that a wise man ought to do nothing
but for himself, forasmuch as he only was worthy of it: and to the saying
of Theodorus, that it was not reasonable a wise man should hazard himself
for his country, and endanger wisdom for a company of fools. Our condition
is as ridiculous as risible.</p>
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