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<h2> CHAPTER XV——THAT OUR DESIRES ARE AUGMENTED BY DIFFICULTY </h2>
<p>There is no reason that has not its contrary, say the wisest of the
philosophers. I was just now ruminating on the excellent saying one of the
ancients alleges for the contempt of life: "No good can bring pleasure,
unless it be that for the loss of which we are beforehand prepared."</p>
<p>"In aequo est dolor amissae rei, et timor amittendae,"<br/>
<br/>
["The grief of losing a thing, and the fear of losing it,<br/>
are equal."—Seneca, Ep., 98.]<br/></p>
<p>meaning by this that the fruition of life cannot be truly pleasant to us
if we are in fear of losing it. It might, however, be said, on the
contrary, that we hug and embrace this good so much the more earnestly,
and with so much greater affection, by how much we see it the less assured
and fear to have it taken from us: for it is evident, as fire burns with
greater fury when cold comes to mix with it, that our will is more
obstinate by being opposed:</p>
<p>"Si nunquam Danaen habuisset ahenea turris,<br/>
Non esses, Danae, de Jove facta parens;"<br/>
<br/>
["If a brazen tower had not held Danae, you would not, Danae, have<br/>
been made a mother by Jove."—Ovid, Amoy., ii. 19, 27.]<br/></p>
<p>and that there is nothing naturally so contrary to our taste as satiety
which proceeds from facility; nor anything that so much whets it as rarity
and difficulty:</p>
<p>"Omnium rerum voluptas ipso, quo debet fugare, periculo crescit."<br/>
<br/>
["The pleasure of all things increases by the same danger that<br/>
should deter it."—Seneca, De Benef., vii. 9.]<br/>
<br/>
"Galla, nega; satiatur amor, nisi gaudia torquent."<br/>
<br/>
["Galla, refuse me; love is glutted with joys that are not attended<br/>
with trouble."—Martial, iv. 37.]<br/></p>
<p>To keep love in breath, Lycurgus made a decree that the married people of
Lacedaemon should never enjoy one another but by stealth; and that it
should be as great a shame to take them in bed together as committing with
others. The difficulty of assignations, the danger of surprise, the shame
of the morning,</p>
<p>"Et languor, et silentium,<br/>
Et latere petitus imo Spiritus:"<br/>
<br/>
["And languor, and silence, and sighs, coming from the innermost<br/>
heart."—Hor., Epod., xi. 9.]<br/></p>
<p>these are what give the piquancy to the sauce. How many very wantonly
pleasant sports spring from the most decent and modest language of the
works on love? Pleasure itself seeks to be heightened with pain; it is
much sweeter when it smarts and has the skin rippled. The courtesan Flora
said she never lay with Pompey but that she made him wear the prints of
her teeth.—[Plutarch, Life of Pompey, c. i.]</p>
<p>"Quod petiere, premunt arcte, faciuntque dolorem<br/>
Corporis, et dentes inlidunt saepe labellis . . .<br/>
Et stimuli subsunt, qui instigant laedere ad ipsum,<br/>
Quodcunque est, rabies unde illae germina surgunt."<br/>
<br/>
["What they have sought they dress closely, and cause pain; on the<br/>
lips fix the teeth, and every kiss indents: urged by latent stimulus<br/>
the part to wound"—Lucretius, i. 4.]<br/></p>
<p>And so it is in everything: difficulty gives all things their estimation;
the people of the march of Ancona more readily make their vows to St.
James, and those of Galicia to Our Lady of Loreto; they make wonderful
to-do at Liege about the baths of Lucca, and in Tuscany about those of
Aspa: there are few Romans seen in the fencing school of Rome, which is
full of French. That great Cato also, as much as us, nauseated his wife
whilst she was his, and longed for her when in the possession of another.
I was fain to turn out into the paddock an old horse, as he was not to be
governed when he smelt a mare: the facility presently sated him as towards
his own, but towards strange mares, and the first that passed by the pale
of his pasture, he would again fall to his importunate neighings and his
furious heats as before. Our appetite contemns and passes by what it has
in possession, to run after that it has not:</p>
<p>"Transvolat in medio posita, et fugientia captat."<br/>
<br/>
["He slights her who is close at hand, and runs after her<br/>
who flees from him."—Horace, Sat., i. 2, 108.]<br/></p>
<p>To forbid us anything is to make us have a mind to't:</p>
<p>"Nisi to servare puellam<br/>
Incipis, incipiet desinere esse mea:"<br/>
<br/>
["Unless you begin to guard your mistress, she will soon begin<br/>
to be no longer mine."—Ovid, Amoy., ii. 19, 47.]<br/></p>
<p>to give it wholly up to us is to beget in us contempt. Want and abundance
fall into the same inconvenience:</p>
<p>"Tibi quod superest, mihi quod desit, dolet."<br/>
<br/>
["Your superfluities trouble you, and what I want<br/>
troubles me.—"Terence, Phoym., i. 3, 9.]<br/></p>
<p>Desire and fruition equally afflict us. The rigors of mistresses are
troublesome, but facility, to say truth, still more so; forasmuch as
discontent and anger spring from the esteem we have of the thing desired,
heat and actuate love, but satiety begets disgust; 'tis a blunt, dull,
stupid, tired, and slothful passion:</p>
<p>"Si qua volet regnare diu, contemnat amantem."<br/>
<br/>
["She who would long retain her power must use her lover ill."<br/>
—Ovid, Amor., ii. 19, 33]<br/>
<br/>
"Contemnite, amantes:<br/>
Sic hodie veniet, si qua negavit heri."<br/>
<br/>
["Slight your mistress; she will to-day come who denied you<br/>
yesterday.—"Propertius, ii. 14, 19.]<br/></p>
<p>Why did Poppea invent the use of a mask to hide the beauties of her face,
but to enhance it to her lovers? Why have they veiled, even below the
heels, those beauties that every one desires to show, and that every one
desires to see? Why do they cover with so many hindrances, one over
another, the parts where our desires and their own have their principal
seat? And to what serve those great bastion farthingales, with which our
ladies fortify their haunches, but to allure our appetite and to draw us
on by removing them farther from us?</p>
<p>"Et fugit ad salices, et se cupit ante videri."<br/>
<br/>
["She flies to the osiers, and desires beforehand to be seen going."<br/>
—Virgil, Eclog., iii. 65.]<br/>
<br/>
"Interdum tunica duxit operta moram."<br/>
<br/>
["The hidden robe has sometimes checked love."<br/>
—Propertius, ii. 15, 6.]<br/></p>
<p>To what use serves the artifice of this virgin modesty, this grave
coldness, this severe countenance, this professing to be ignorant of
things that they know better than we who instruct them in them, but to
increase in us the desire to overcome, control, and trample underfoot at
pleasure all this ceremony and all these obstacles? For there is not only
pleasure, but, moreover, glory, in conquering and debauching that soft
sweetness and that childish modesty, and to reduce a cold and matronlike
gravity to the mercy of our ardent desires: 'tis a glory, say they, to
triumph over modesty, chastity, and temperance; and whoever dissuades
ladies from those qualities, betrays both them and himself. We are to
believe that their hearts tremble with affright, that the very sound of
our words offends the purity of their ears, that they hate us for talking
so, and only yield to our importunity by a compulsive force. Beauty, all
powerful as it is, has not wherewithal to make itself relished without the
mediation of these little arts. Look into Italy, where there is the most
and the finest beauty to be sold, how it is necessitated to have recourse
to extrinsic means and other artifices to render itself charming, and yet,
in truth, whatever it may do, being venal and public, it remains feeble
and languishing. Even so in virtue itself, of two like effects, we
notwithstanding look upon that as the fairest and most worthy, wherein the
most trouble and hazard are set before us.</p>
<p>'Tis an effect of the divine Providence to suffer the holy Church to be
afflicted, as we see it, with so many storms and troubles, by this
opposition to rouse pious souls, and to awaken them from that drowsy
lethargy wherein, by so long tranquillity, they had been immerged. If we
should lay the loss we have sustained in the number of those who have gone
astray, in the balance against the benefit we have had by being again put
in breath, and by having our zeal and strength revived by reason of this
opposition, I know not whether the utility would not surmount the damage.</p>
<p>We have thought to tie the nuptial knot of our marriages more fast and
firm by having taken away all means of dissolving it, but the knot of the
will and affection is so much the more slackened and made loose, by how
much that of constraint is drawn closer; and, on the contrary, that which
kept the marriages at Rome so long in honour and inviolate, was the
liberty every one who so desired had to break them; they kept their wives
the better, because they might part with them, if they would; and, in the
full liberty of divorce, five hundred years and more passed away before
any one made use on't.</p>
<p>"Quod licet, ingratum est; quod non licet, acrius urit."<br/>
<br/>
["What you may, is displeasing; what is forbidden, whets the<br/>
appetite.—"Ovid, Amor., ii. 19.]<br/></p>
<p>We might here introduce the opinion of an ancient upon this occasion,
"that executions rather whet than dull the edge of vices: that they do not
beget the care of doing well, that being the work of reason and
discipline, but only a care not to be taken in doing ill:"</p>
<p>"Latius excisae pestis contagia serpunt."<br/>
<br/>
["The plague-sore being lanced, the infection spreads all the more."<br/>
—Rutilius, Itinerar. 1, 397.]<br/></p>
<p>I do not know that this is true; but I experimentally know, that never
civil government was by that means reformed; the order and regimen of
manners depend upon some other expedient.</p>
<p>The Greek histories make mention of the Argippians, neighbours to Scythia,
who live without either rod or stick for offence; where not only no one
attempts to attack them, but whoever can fly thither is safe, by reason of
their virtue and sanctity of life, and no one is so bold as to lay hands
upon them; and they have applications made to them to determine the
controversies that arise betwixt men of other countries. There is a
certain nation, where the enclosures of gardens and fields they would
preserve, are made only of a string of cotton; and, so fenced, is more
firm and secure than by our hedges and ditches.</p>
<p>"Furem signata sollicitant . . .<br/>
aperta effractarius praeterit."<br/>
<br/>
["Things sealed, up invite a thief: the housebreaker<br/>
passes by open doors."—Seneca, Epist., 68.]<br/></p>
<p>Peradventure, the facility of entering my house, amongst other things, has
been a means to preserve it from the violence of our civil wars: defence
allures attempt, and defiance provokes an enemy. I enervated the soldiers'
design by depriving the exploit of danger and all manner of military
glory, which is wont to serve them for pretence and excuse: whatever is
bravely, is ever honourably, done, at a time when justice is dead. I
render them the conquest of my house cowardly and base; it is never shut
to any one that knocks; my gate has no other guard than a porter, and he
of ancient custom and ceremony; who does not so much serve to defend it as
to offer it with more decorum and grace; I have no other guard nor
sentinel than the stars. A gentleman would play the fool to make a show of
defence, if he be not really in a condition to defend himself. He who lies
open on one side, is everywhere so; our ancestors did not think of
building frontier garrisons. The means of assaulting, I mean without
battery or army, and of surprising our houses, increases every day more
and more beyond the means to guard them; men's wits are generally bent
that way; in invasion every one is concerned: none but the rich in
defence. Mine was strong for the time when it was built; I have added
nothing to it of that kind, and should fear that its strength might turn
against myself; to which we are to consider that a peaceable time would
require it should be dismantled. There is danger never to be able to
regain it, and it would be very hard to keep; for in intestine
dissensions, your man may be of the party you fear; and where religion is
the pretext, even a man's nearest relations become unreliable, with some
colour of justice. The public exchequer will not maintain our domestic
garrisons; they would exhaust it: we ourselves have not the means to do it
without ruin, or, which is more inconvenient and injurious, without
ruining the people. The condition of my loss would be scarcely worse. As
to the rest, you there lose all; and even your friends will be more ready
to accuse your want of vigilance and your improvidence, and your ignorance
of and indifference to your own business, than to pity you. That so many
garrisoned houses have been undone whereas this of mine remains, makes me
apt to believe that they were only lost by being guarded; this gives an
enemy both an invitation and colour of reason; all defence shows a face of
war. Let who will come to me in God's name; but I shall not invite them;
'tis the retirement I have chosen for my repose from war. I endeavour to
withdraw this corner from the public tempest, as I also do another corner
in my soul. Our war may put on what forms it will, multiply and diversify
itself into new parties; for my part, I stir not. Amongst so many
garrisoned houses, myself alone amongst those of my rank, so far as I
know, in France, have trusted purely to Heaven for the protection of mine,
and have never removed plate, deeds, or hangings. I will neither fear nor
save myself by halves. If a full acknowledgment acquires the Divine
favour, it will stay with me to the end: if not, I have still continued
long enough to render my continuance remarkable and fit to be recorded.
How? Why, there are thirty years that I have thus lived.</p>
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