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第12章

lay morals-第12章

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 above a certain and that not at all a high price。  Are  you sure you are one of these?  Are you sure you prefer  cigars at sixpence each to pipes at some fraction of a  farthing?  Are you sure you wish to keep a gig?  Do you care  about where you sleep; or are you not as much at your ease in  a cheap lodging as in an Elizabethan manor…house?  Do you  enjoy fine clothes?  It is not possible to answer these  questions without a trial; and there is nothing more obvious  to my mind; than that a man who has not experienced some ups  and downs; and been forced to live more cheaply than in his  father's house; has still his education to begin。  Let the  experiment be made; and he will find to his surprise that he  has been eating beyond his appetite up to that hour; that the  cheap lodging; the cheap tobacco; the rough country clothes;  the plain table; have not only no power to damp his spirits;  but perhaps give him as keen pleasure in the using as the  dainties that he took; betwixt sleep and waking; in his  former callous and somnambulous submission to wealth。

The true Bohemian; a creature lost to view under the  imaginary Bohemians of literature; is exactly described by  such a principle of life。  The Bohemian of the novel; who  drinks more than is good for him and prefers anything to  work; and wears strange clothes; is for the most part a  respectable Bohemian; respectable in disrespectability;  living for the outside; and an adventurer。  But the man I  mean lives wholly to himself; does what he wishes; and not  what is thought proper; buys what he wants for himself; and  not what is thought proper; works at what he believes he can  do well and not what will bring him in money or favour。  You  may be the most respectable of men; and yet a true Bohemian。   And the test is this: a Bohemian; for as poor as he may be;  is always open…handed to his friends; he knows what he can do  with money and how he can do without it; a far rarer and more  useful knowledge; he has had less; and continued to live in  some contentment; and hence he cares not to keep more; and  shares his sovereign or his shilling with a friend。  The  poor; if they are generous; are Bohemian in virtue of their  birth。  Do you know where beggars go?  Not to the great  houses where people sit dazed among their thousands; but to  the doors of poor men who have seen the world; and it was the  widow who had only two mites; who cast half her fortune into  the treasury。

But a young man who elects to save on dress or on lodging; or  who in any way falls out of the level of expenditure which is  common to his level in society; falls out of society  altogether。  I suppose the young man to have chosen his  career on honourable principles; he finds his talents and  instincts can be best contented in a certain pursuit; in a  certain industry; he is sure that he is serving mankind with  a healthy and becoming service; and he is not sure that he  would be doing so; or doing so equally well; in any other  industry within his reach。  Then that is his true sphere in  life; not the one in which he was born to his father; but the  one which is proper to his talents and instincts。  And  suppose he does fall out of society; is that a cause of  sorrow?  Is your heart so dead that you prefer the  recognition of many to the love of a few?  Do you think  society loves you?  Put it to the proof。  Decline in material  expenditure; and you will find they care no more for you than  for the Khan of Tartary。  You will lose no friends。  If you  had any; you will keep them。  Only those who were friends to  your coat and equipage will disappear; the smiling faces will  disappear as by enchantment; but the kind hearts will remain  steadfastly kind。  Are you so lost; are you so dead; are you  so little sure of your own soul and your own footing upon  solid fact; that you prefer before goodness and happiness the  countenance of sundry diners…out; who will flee from you at a  report of ruin; who will drop you with insult at a shadow of  disgrace; who do not know you and do not care to know you but  by sight; and whom you in your turn neither know nor care to  know in a more human manner?  Is it not the principle of  society; openly avowed; that friendship must not interfere  with business; which being paraphrased; means simply that a  consideration of money goes before any consideration of  affection known to this cold…blooded gang; that they have not  even the honour of thieves; and will rook their nearest and  dearest as readily as a stranger?  I hope I would go as far  as most to serve a friend; but I declare openly I would not  put on my hat to do a pleasure to society。  I may starve my  appetites and control my temper for the sake of those I love;  but society shall take me as I choose to be; or go without  me。  Neither they nor I will lose; for where there is no  love; it is both laborious and unprofitable to associate。

But it is obvious that if it is only right for a man to spend  money on that which he can truly and thoroughly enjoy; the  doctrine applies with equal force to the rich and to the  poor; to the man who has amassed many thousands as well as to  the youth precariously beginning life。  And it may be asked;  Is not this merely preparing misers; who are not the best of  company?  But the principle was this: that which a man has  not fairly earned; and; further; that which he cannot fully  enjoy; does not belong to him; but is a part of mankind's  treasure which he holds as steward on parole。  To mankind;  then; it must be made profitable; and how this should be done  is; once more; a problem which each man must solve for  himself; and about which none has a right to judge him。  Yet  there are a few considerations which are very obvious and may  here be stated。  Mankind is not only the whole in general;  but every one in particular。  Every man or woman is one of  mankind's dear possessions; to his or her just brain; and  kind heart; and active hands; mankind intrusts some of its  hopes for the future; he or she is a possible well…spring of  good acts and source of blessings to the race。  This money  which you do not need; which; in a rigid sense; you do not  want; may therefore be returned not only in public  benefactions to the race; but in private kindnesses。  Your  wife; your children; your friends stand nearest to you; and  should be helped the first。  There at least there can be  little imposture; for you know their necessities of your own  knowledge。  And consider; if all the world did as you did;  and according to their means extended help in the circle of  their affections; there would be no more crying want in times  of plenty and no more cold; mechanical charity given with a  doubt and received with confusion。  Would not this simple  rule make a new world out of the old and cruel one which we  inhabit?


'After two more sentences the fragment breaks off。'




FATHER DAMIEN AN OPEN LETTER TO THE REVEREND DR。 HYDE OF HONOLULU




SYDNEY; FEBRUARY 25; 1890。


SIR; … It may probably occur to you that we have met; and  visited; and conversed; on my side; with interest。  You may  remember that you have done me several courtesies; for which  I was prepared to be grateful。  But there are duties which  come before gratitude; and offences which justly divide  friends; far more acquaintances。  Your letter to the Reverend  H。 B。 Gage is a document which; in my sight; if you had  filled me with bread when I was starving; if you had sat up  to nurse my father when he lay a…dying; would yet absolve me  from the bonds of gratitude。  You know enough; doubtless; of  the process of canonisation to be aware that; a hundred years  after the death of Damien; there will appear a man charged  with the painful office of the DEVIL'S ADVOCATE。  After that  noble brother of mine; and of all frail clay; shall have lain  a century at rest; one shall accuse; one defend him。  The  circumstance is unusual that the devil's advocate should be a  volunteer; should be a member of a sect immediately rival;  and should make haste to take upon himself his ugly office  ere the bones are cold; unusual; and of a taste which I shall  leave my readers free to qualify; unusual; and to me  inspiring。  If 

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