FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   >>  
f goodness and innocence are, for this reason, in some sort grown into contempt. I very well know that several virtues, as chastity, sobriety, and temperance, may come to a man through personal defects. Constancy in danger, if it must be so called, the contempt of death, and patience in misfortunes, may ofttimes be found in men for want of well judging of such accidents, and not apprehending them for such as they are. Want of apprehension and stupidity sometimes counterfeit virtuous effects as I have often seen it happen, that men have been commended for what really merited blame. An Italian lord once said this, in my presence, to the disadvantage of his own nation: that the subtlety of the Italians, and the vivacity of their conceptions were so great, and they foresaw the dangers and accidents that might befall them so far off, that it was not to be thought strange, if they were often, in war, observed to provide for their safety, even before they had discovered the peril; that we French and the Spaniards, who were not so cunning, went on further, and that we must be made to see and feel the danger before we would take the alarm; but that even then we could not stick to it. But the Germans and Swiss, more gross and heavy, had not the sense to look about them, even when the blows were falling about their ears. Peradventure, he only talked so for mirth's sake; and yet it is most certain that in war raw soldiers rush into dangers with more precipitancy than after they have been cudgelled*--(The original has eschauldex--scalded) "Haud ignarus . . . . quantum nova gloria in armis, Et praedulce decus, primo certamine possit." ["Not ignorant how much power the fresh glory of arms and sweetest honour possess in the first contest."--AEneid, xi. 154] For this reason it is that, when we judge of a particular action, we are to consider the circumstances, and the whole man by whom it is performed, before we give it a name. To instance in myself: I have sometimes known my friends call that prudence in me, which was merely fortune; and repute that courage and patience, which was judgment and opinion; and attribute to me one title for another, sometimes to my advantage and sometimes otherwise. As to the rest, I am so far from being arrived at the first and most perfect degree of excellence, where virtue is turned into habit, that even of the second I have made no great proofs. I have not
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   47   48   49   50   51   52   53   54   55   56   57   58   59   60   61   62   63   64   65   >>  



Top keywords:
accidents
 

patience

 

dangers

 
reason
 

contempt

 

danger

 
possit
 

ignorant

 

sweetest

 
honour

possess

 

precipitancy

 

cudgelled

 
soldiers
 
original
 

praedulce

 

gloria

 

eschauldex

 
scalded
 

ignarus


quantum

 

certamine

 

instance

 

advantage

 

opinion

 

judgment

 

attribute

 

arrived

 

turned

 

proofs


virtue

 

perfect

 
degree
 

excellence

 

courage

 
repute
 

action

 

circumstances

 

AEneid

 

performed


friends

 

prudence

 
fortune
 

contest

 

effects

 
virtuous
 

happen

 
commended
 
counterfeit
 
stupidity