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<h2> CHAPTER VIII——OF THE AFFECTION OF FATHERS TO THEIR CHILDREN </h2>
<h3> To Madame D'Estissac. </h3>
<p>MADAM, if the strangeness and novelty of my subject, which are wont to
give value to things, do not save me, I shall never come off with honour
from this foolish attempt: but 'tis so fantastic, and carries a face so
unlike the common use, that this, peradventure, may make it pass. 'Tis a
melancholic humour, and consequently a humour very much an enemy to my
natural complexion, engendered by the pensiveness of the solitude into
which for some years past I have retired myself, that first put into my
head this idle fancy of writing. Wherein, finding myself totally
unprovided and empty of other matter, I presented myself to myself for
argument and subject. 'Tis the only book in the world of its kind, and of
a wild and extravagant design. There is nothing worth remark in this
affair but that extravagancy: for in a subject so vain and frivolous, the
best workman in the world could not have given it a form fit to recommend
it to any manner of esteem.</p>
<p>Now, madam, having to draw my own picture to the life, I had omitted one
important feature, had I not therein represented the honour I have ever
had for you and your merits; which I have purposely chosen to say in the
beginning of this chapter, by reason that amongst the many other excellent
qualities you are mistress of, that of the tender love you have manifested
to your children, is seated in one of the highest places. Whoever knows at
what age Monsieur D'Estissac, your husband, left you a widow, the great
and honourable matches that have since been offered to you, as many as to
any lady of your condition in France, the constancy and steadiness
wherewith, for so many years, you have sustained so many sharp
difficulties, the burden and conduct of affairs, which have persecuted you
in every corner of the kingdom, and are not yet weary of tormenting you,
and the happy direction you have given to all these, by your sole prudence
or good fortune, will easily conclude with me that we have not so vivid an
example as yours of maternal affection in our times. I praise God, madam,
that it has been so well employed; for the great hopes Monsieur
D'Estissac, your son, gives of himself, render sufficient assurance that
when he comes of age you will reap from him all the obedience and
gratitude of a very good man. But, forasmuch as by reason of his tender
years, he has not been capable of taking notice of those offices of
extremest value he has in so great number received from you, I will, if
these papers shall one day happen to fall into his hands, when I shall
neither have mouth nor speech left to deliver it to him, that he shall
receive from me a true account of those things, which shall be more
effectually manifested to him by their own effects, by which he will
understand that there is not a gentleman in France who stands more
indebted to a mother's care; and that he cannot, in the future, give a
better nor more certain testimony of his own worth and virtue than by
acknowledging you for that excellent mother you are.</p>
<p>If there be any law truly natural, that is to say, any instinct that is
seen universally and perpetually imprinted in both beasts and men (which
is not without controversy), I can say, that in my opinion, next to the
care every animal has of its own preservation, and to avoid that which may
hurt him, the affection that the begetter bears to his offspring holds the
second place in this rank. And seeing that nature appears to have
recommended it to us, having regard to the extension and progression of
the successive pieces of this machine of hers, 'tis no wonder if, on the
contrary, that of children towards their parents is not so great. To which
we may add this other Aristotelian consideration, that he who confers a
benefit on any one, loves him better than he is beloved by him again: that
he to whom is owing, loves better than he who owes; and that every
artificer is fonder of his work, than, if that work had sense, it would be
of him; by reason that it is dear to us to be, and to be consists in
movement and action; therefore every one has in some sort a being in his
work. He who confers a benefit exercises a fine and honest action; he who
receives it exercises the useful only. Now the useful is much less lovable
than the honest; the honest is stable and permanent, supplying him who has
done it with a continual gratification. The useful loses itself, easily
slides away, and the memory of it is neither so fresh nor so pleasing.
Those things are dearest to us that have cost us most, and giving is more
chargeable than receiving.</p>
<p>Since it has pleased God to endue us with some capacity of reason, to the
end we may not, like brutes, be servilely subject and enslaved to the laws
common to both, but that we should by judgment and a voluntary liberty
apply ourselves to them, we ought, indeed, something to yield to the
simple authority of nature, but not suffer ourselves to be tyrannically
hurried away and transported by her; reason alone should have the conduct
of our inclinations. I, for my part, have a strange disgust for those
propensions that are started in us without the mediation and direction of
the judgment, as, upon the subject I am speaking of, I cannot entertain
that passion of dandling and caressing infants scarcely born, having as
yet neither motion of soul nor shape of body distinguishable, by which
they can render themselves amiable, and have not willingly suffered them
to be nursed near me. A true and regular affection ought to spring and
increase with the knowledge they give us of themselves, and then, if they
are worthy of it, the natural propension walking hand in hand with reason,
to cherish them with a truly paternal love; and so to judge, also, if they
be otherwise, still rendering ourselves to reason, notwithstanding the
inclination of nature. 'Tis oft-times quite otherwise; and, most commonly,
we find ourselves more taken with the running up and down, the games, and
puerile simplicities of our children, than we do, afterwards, with their
most complete actions; as if we had loved them for our sport, like
monkeys, and not as men; and some there are, who are very liberal in
buying them balls to play withal, who are very close-handed for the least
necessary expense when they come to age. Nay, it looks as if the jealousy
of seeing them appear in and enjoy the world when we are about to leave
it, rendered us more niggardly and stingy towards them; it vexes us that
they tread upon our heels, as if to solicit us to go out; if this were to
be feared, since the order of things will have it so that they cannot, to
speak the truth, be nor live, but at the expense of our being and life, we
should never meddle with being fathers at all.</p>
<p>For my part, I think it cruelty and injustice not to receive them into the
share and society of our goods, and not to make them partakers in the
intelligence of our domestic affairs when they are capable, and not to
lessen and contract our own expenses to make the more room for theirs,
seeing we beget them to that effect. 'Tis unjust that an old fellow,
broken and half dead, should alone, in a corner of the chimney, enjoy the
money that would suffice for the maintenance and advancement of many
children, and suffer them, in the meantime, to lose their' best years for
want of means to advance themselves in the public service and the
knowledge of men. A man by this course drives them to despair, and to seek
out by any means, how unjust or dishonourable soever, to provide for their
own support: as I have, in my time, seen several young men of good
extraction so addicted to stealing, that no correction could cure them of
it. I know one of a very good family, to whom, at the request of a brother
of his, a very honest and brave gentleman, I once spoke on this account,
who made answer, and confessed to me roundly, that he had been put upon
this paltry practice by the severity and avarice of his father; but that
he was now so accustomed to it he could not leave it off. And, at that
very time, he was trapped stealing a lady's rings, having come into her
chamber, as she was dressing with several others. He put me in mind of a
story I had heard of another gentleman, so perfect and accomplished in
this fine trade in his youth, that, after he came to his estate and
resolved to give it over, he could not hold his hands, nevertheless, if he
passed by a shop where he saw anything he liked, from catching it up,
though it put him to the shame of sending afterwards to pay for it. And I
have myself seen several so habituated to this quality that even amongst
their comrades they could not forbear filching, though with intent to
restore what they had taken. I am a Gascon, and yet there is no vice I so
little understand as that; I hate it something more by disposition than I
condemn it by reason; I do not so much as desire anything of another
man's. This province of ours is, in plain truth, a little more decried
than the other parts of the kingdom; and yet we have several times seen,
in our times, men of good families of other provinces, in the hands of
justice, convicted of abominable thefts. I fear this vice is, in some
sort, to be attributed to the fore-mentioned vice of the fathers.</p>
<p>And if a man should tell me, as a lord of very good understanding once
did, that "he hoarded up wealth, not to extract any other fruit and use
from his parsimony, but to make himself honoured and sought after by his
relations; and that age having deprived him of all other power, it was the
only remaining remedy to maintain his authority in his family, and to keep
him from being neglected and despised by all around," in truth, not only
old age, but all other imbecility, according to Aristotle, is the promoter
of avarice; that is something, but it is physic for a disease that a man
should prevent the birth of. A father is very miserable who has no other
hold on his children's affection than the need they have of his
assistance, if that can be called affection; he must render himself worthy
to be respected by his virtue and wisdom, and beloved by his kindness and
the sweetness of his manners; even the very ashes of a rich matter have
their value; and we are wont to have the bones and relics of worthy men in
regard and reverence. No old age can be so decrepid in a man who has
passed his life in honour, but it must be venerable, especially to his
children, whose soul he must have trained up to their duty by reason, not
by necessity and the need they have of him, nor by harshness and
compulsion:</p>
<p>"Et errat longe mea quidem sententia<br/>
Qui imperium credat esse gravius, aut stabilius,<br/>
Vi quod fit, quam illud, quod amicitia adjungitur."<br/>
<br/>
["He wanders far from the truth, in my opinion, who thinks that<br/>
government more absolute and durable which is acquired by force than<br/>
that which is attached to friendship."—Terence, Adelph., i. I, 40.]<br/></p>
<p>I condemn all violence in the education of a tender soul that is designed
for honour and liberty. There is I know not what of servile in rigour and
constraint; and I am of opinion that what is not to be done by reason,
prudence, and address, is never to be affected by force. I myself was
brought up after that manner; and they tell me that in all my first age I
never felt the rod but twice, and then very slightly. I practised the same
method with my children, who all of them died at nurse, except Leonora, my
only daughter, and who arrived to the age of five years and upward without
other correction for her childish faults (her mother's indulgence easily
concurring) than words only, and those very gentle; in which kind of
proceeding, though my end and expectation should be both frustrated, there
are other causes enough to lay the fault on without blaming my discipline,
which I know to be natural and just, and I should, in this, have yet been
more religious towards the males, as less born to subjection and more
free; and I should have made it my business to fill their hearts with
ingenuousness and freedom. I have never observed other effects of whipping
than to render boys more cowardly, or more wilfully obstinate.</p>
<p>Do we desire to be beloved of our children? Will we remove from them all
occasion of wishing our death though no occasion of so horrid a wish can
either be just or excusable?</p>
<p>"Nullum scelus rationem habet."<br/>
<br/>
["No wickedness has reason."—Livy, xxviii. 28]<br/></p>
<p>Let us reasonably accommodate their lives with what is in our power. In
order to this, we should not marry so young that our age shall in a manner
be confounded with theirs; for this inconvenience plunges us into many
very great difficulties, and especially the gentry of the nation, who are
of a condition wherein they have little to do, and who live upon their
rents only: for elsewhere, with people who live by their labour, the
plurality and company of children is an increase to the common stock; they
are so many new tools and instruments wherewith to grow rich.</p>
<p>I married at three-and-thirty years of age, and concur in the opinion of
thirty-five, which is said to be that of Aristotle. Plato will have nobody
marry before thirty; but he has reason to laugh at those who undertook the
work of marriage after five-and-fifty, and condemns their offspring as
unworthy of aliment and life. Thales gave the truest limits, who, young
and being importuned by his mother to marry, answered, "That it was too
soon," and, being grown into years and urged again, "That it was too
late." A man must deny opportunity to every inopportune action. The
ancient Gauls' looked upon it as a very horrid thing for a man to have
society with a woman before he was twenty years of age, and strictly
recommended to the men who designed themselves for war the keeping their
virginity till well grown in years, forasmuch as courage is abated and
diverted by intercourse with women:</p>
<p>"Ma, or congiunto a giovinetta sposa,<br/>
E lieto omai de' figli, era invilito<br/>
Negli affetti di padre et di marito."<br/>
<br/>
["Now, married to a young wife and happy in children, he was<br/>
demoralised by his love as father and husband."<br/>
—Tasso, Gierus., x. 39.]<br/></p>
<p>Muley Hassam, king of Tunis, he whom the Emperor Charles V. restored to
his kingdom, reproached the memory of his father Mahomet with the
frequentation of women, styling him loose, effeminate, and a getter of
children.—[Of whom he had thirty-four.]—The Greek history
observes of Iccus the Tarentine, of Chryso, Astyllus, Diopompos, and
others, that to keep their bodies in order for the Olympic games and such
like exercises, they denied themselves during that preparation all
commerce with Venus. In a certain country of the Spanish Indies men were
not permitted to marry till after forty age, and yet the girls were
allowed at ten. 'Tis not time for a gentleman of thirty years old to give
place to his son who is twenty; he is himself in a condition to serve both
in the expeditions of war and in the court of his prince; has need of all
his appurtenances; and yet, doubtless, he ought to surrender a share, but
not so great an one as to forget himself for others; and for such an one
the answer that fathers have ordinarily in their mouths, "I will not put
off my clothes, before I go to bed," serves well.</p>
<p>But a father worn out with age and infirmities, and deprived by weakness
and want of health of the common society of men, wrongs himself and his to
amass a great heap of treasure. He has lived long enough, if he be wise,
to have a mind to strip himself to go to bed, not to his very shirt, I
confess, but to that and a good, warm dressing-gown; the remaining pomps,
of which he has no further use, he ought voluntarily to surrender to
those, to whom by the order of nature they belong. 'Tis reason he should
refer the use of those things to them, seeing that nature has reduced him
to such a state that he cannot enjoy them himself; otherwise there is
doubtless malice and envy in the case. The greatest act of the Emperor
Charles V. was that when, in imitation of some of the ancients of his own
quality, confessing it but reason to strip ourselves when our clothes
encumber and grow too heavy for us, and to lie down when our legs begin to
fail us, he resigned his possessions, grandeur, and power to his son, when
he found himself failing in vigour, and steadiness for the conduct of his
affairs suitable with the glory he had therein acquired:</p>
<p>"Solve senescentem mature sanus equum, ne<br/>
Peccet ad extremum ridendus, et ilia ducat."<br/>
<br/>
["Dismiss the old horse in good time, lest, failing in the lists,<br/>
the spectators laugh."—Horace, Epist., i., I, 8.]<br/></p>
<p>This fault of not perceiving betimes and of not being sensible of the
feebleness and extreme alteration that age naturally brings both upon body
and mind, which, in my opinion, is equal, if indeed the soul has not more
than half, has lost the reputation of most of the great men in the world.
I have known in my time, and been intimately acquainted with persons of
great authority, whom one might easily discern marvellously lapsed from
the sufficiency I knew they were once endued with, by the reputation they
had acquired in their former years, whom I could heartily, for their own
sakes, have wished at home at their ease, discharged of their public or
military employments, which were now grown too heavy for their shoulders.
I have formerly been very familiar in a gentleman's house, a widower and
very old, though healthy and cheerful enough: this gentleman had several
daughters to marry and a son already of ripe age, which brought upon him
many visitors, and a great expense, neither of which well pleased him, not
only out of consideration of frugality, but yet more for having, by reason
of his age, entered into a course of life far differing from ours. I told
him one day a little boldly, as I used to do, that he would do better to
give us younger folk room, and to leave his principal house (for he had
but that well placed and furnished) to his son, and himself retire to an
estate he had hard by, where nobody would trouble his repose, seeing he
could not otherwise avoid being importuned by us, the condition of his
children considered. He took my advice afterwards, and found an advantage
in so doing.</p>
<p>I do not mean that a man should so instal them as not to reserve to
himself a liberty to retract; I, who am now arrived to the age wherein
such things are fit to be done, would resign to them the enjoyment of my
house and goods, but with a power of revocation if they should give me
cause to alter my mind; I would leave to them the use, that being no
longer convenient for me; and, of the general authority and power over
all, would reserve as much as—I thought good to myself; having
always held that it must needs be a great satisfaction to an aged father
himself to put his children into the way of governing his affairs, and to
have power during his own life to control their behaviour, supplying them
with instruction and advice from his own experience, and himself to
transfer the ancient honour and order of his house into the hands of those
who are to succeed him, and by that means to satisfy himself as to the
hopes he may conceive of their future conduct. And in order to this I
would not avoid their company; I would observe them near at hand, and
partake, according to the condition of my age, of their feasts and
jollities. If I did not live absolutely amongst them, which I could not do
without annoying them and their friends, by reason of the morosity of my
age and the restlessness of my infirmities, and without violating also the
rules and order of living I should then have set down to myself, I would,
at least, live near them in some retired part of my house, not the best in
show, but the most commodious. Nor as I saw some years ago, a dean of St.
Hilary of Poitiers given up to such a solitude, that at the time I came
into his chamber it had been two and twenty years that he had not stepped
one foot out of it, and yet had all his motions free and easy, and was in
good health, saving a cold that fell upon his lungs; he would, hardly once
in a week, suffer any one to come in to see him; he always kept himself
shut up in his chamber alone, except that a servant brought him, once a
day, something to eat, and did then but just come in and go out again. His
employment was to walk up and down, and read some book, for he was a bit
of a scholar; but, as to the rest, obstinately bent to die in this
retirement, as he soon after did. I would endeavour by pleasant
conversation to create in my children a warm and unfeigned friendship and
good-will towards me, which in well-descended natures is not hard to do;
for if they be furious brutes, of which this age of ours produces
thousands, we are then to hate and avoid them as such.</p>
<p>I am angry at the custom of forbidding children to call their father by
the name of father, and to enjoin them another, as more full of respect
and reverence, as if nature had not sufficiently provided for our
authority. We call Almighty God Father, and disdain to have our children
call us so; I have reformed this error in my family.—[As did Henry
IV. of France]—And 'tis also folly and injustice to deprive
children, when grown up, of familiarity with their father, and to carry a
scornful and austere countenance toward them, thinking by that to keep
them in awe and obedience; for it is a very idle farce that, instead of
producing the effect designed, renders fathers distasteful, and, which is
worse, ridiculous to their own children. They have youth and vigour in
possession, and consequently the breath and favour of the world; and
therefore receive these fierce and tyrannical looks—mere scarecrows—
of a man without blood, either in his heart or veins, with mockery and
contempt. Though I could make myself feared, I had yet much rather make
myself beloved: there are so many sorts of defects in old age, so much
imbecility, and it is so liable to contempt, that the best acquisition a
man can make is the kindness and affection of his own family; command and
fear are no longer his weapons. Such an one I have known who, having been
very imperious in his youth, when he came to be old, though he might have
lived at his full ease, would ever strike, rant, swear, and curse: the
most violent householder in France: fretting himself with unnecessary
suspicion and vigilance. And all this rumble and clutter but to make his
family cheat him the more; of his barn, his kitchen, cellar, nay, and his
very purse too, others had the greatest use and share, whilst he keeps his
keys in his pocket much more carefully than his eyes. Whilst he hugs
himself with the pitiful frugality of a niggard table, everything goes to
rack and ruin in every corner of his house, in play, drink, all sorts of
profusion, making sport in their junkets with his vain anger and fruitless
parsimony. Every one is a sentinel against him, and if, by accident, any
wretched fellow that serves him is of another humour, and will not join
with the rest, he is presently rendered suspected to him, a bait that old
age very easily bites at of itself. How often has this gentleman boasted
to me in how great awe he kept his family, and how exact an obedience and
reverence they paid him! How clearly he saw into his own affairs!</p>
<p>"Ille solos nescit omnia."<br/>
<br/>
["He alone is ignorant of all that is passing."<br/>
—Terence, Adelph., iv. 2, 9.]<br/></p>
<p>I do not know any one that can muster more parts, both natural and
acquired, proper to maintain dominion, than he; yet he is fallen from it
like a child. For this reason it is that I have picked out him, amongst
several others that I know of the same humour, for the greatest example.
It were matter for a question in the schools, whether he is better thus or
otherwise. In his presence, all submit to and bow to him, and give so much
way to his vanity that nobody ever resists him; he has his fill of
assents, of seeming fear, submission, and respect. Does he turn away a
servant? he packs up his bundle, and is gone; but 'tis no further than
just out of his sight: the steps of old age are so slow, the senses so
troubled, that he will live and do his old office in the same house a year
together without being perceived.</p>
<p>And after a fit interval of time, letters are pretended to come from a
great way off; very humble, suppliant; and full of promises of amendment,
by virtue of which he is again received into favour. Does Monsieur make
any bargain, or prepare any despatch that does not please? 'tis
suppressed, and causes afterwards forged to excuse the want of execution
in the one or answer in the other. No letters being first brought to him,
he never sees any but those that shall seem fit for his knowledge. If by
accident they fall first into his own hand, being used to trust somebody
to read them to him; he reads extempore what he thinks fit, and often
makes such a one ask him pardon who abuses and rails at him in his letter.
In short, he sees nothing, but by an image prepared and designed
beforehand and the most satisfactory they can invent, not to rouse and
awaken his ill humour and choler. I have seen, under various aspects,
enough of these modes of domestic government, long-enduring, constant, to
the like effect.</p>
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