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第4章

lay morals-第4章

小说: lay morals 字数: 每页4000字

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ere he; I should do the like by yours; for it is  not unlikely that there may be something under both。  In the  meantime you must hear how my friend acted。  Like many  invalids; he supposed that he would die。  Now; should he die;  he saw no means of repaying this huge loan which; by the  hands of his father; mankind had advanced him for his  sickness。  In that case it would be lost money。  So he  determined that the advance should be as small as possible;  and; so long as he continued to doubt his recovery; lived in  an upper room; and grudged himself all but necessaries。  But  so soon as he began to perceive a change for the better; he  felt justified in spending more freely; to speed and brighten  his return to health; and trusted in the future to lend a  help to mankind; as mankind; out of its treasury; had lent a  help to him。

I do not say but that my friend was a little too curious and  partial in his view; nor thought too much of himself and too  little of his parents; but I do say that here are some  scruples which tormented my friend in his youth; and still;  perhaps; at odd times give him a prick in the midst of his  enjoyments; and which after all have some foundation in  justice; and point; in their confused way; to some more  honourable honesty within the reach of man。  And at least; is  not this an unusual gloss upon the eighth commandment?  And  what sort of comfort; guidance; or illumination did that  precept afford my friend throughout these contentions?  'Thou  shalt not steal。'  With all my heart!  But AM I stealing?

The truly quaint materialism of our view of life disables us  from pursuing any transaction to an end。  You can make no one  understand that his bargain is anything more than a bargain;  whereas in point of fact it is a link in the policy of  mankind; and either a good or an evil to the world。  We have  a sort of blindness which prevents us from seeing anything  but sovereigns。  If one man agrees to give another so many  shillings for so many hours' work; and then wilfully gives  him a certain proportion of the price in bad money and only  the remainder in good; we can see with half an eye that this  man is a thief。  But if the other spends a certain proportion  of the hours in smoking a pipe of tobacco; and a certain  other proportion in looking at the sky; or the clock; or  trying to recall an air; or in meditation on his own past  adventures; and only the remainder in downright work such as  he is paid to do; is he; because the theft is one of time and  not of money; … is he any the less a thief?  The one gave a  bad shilling; the other an imperfect hour; but both broke the  bargain; and each is a thief。  In piecework; which is what  most of us do; the case is none the less plain for being even  less material。  If you forge a bad knife; you have wasted  some of mankind's iron; and then; with unrivalled cynicism;  you pocket some of mankind's money for your trouble。  Is  there any man so blind who cannot see that this is theft?   Again; if you carelessly cultivate a farm; you have been  playing fast and loose with mankind's resources against  hunger; there will be less bread in consequence; and for lack  of that bread somebody will die next winter: a grim  consideration。  And you must not hope to shuffle out of blame  because you got less money for your less quantity of bread;  for although a theft be partly punished; it is none the less  a theft for that。  You took the farm against competitors;  there were others ready to shoulder the responsibility and be  answerable for the tale of loaves; but it was you who took  it。  By the act you came under a tacit bargain with mankind  to cultivate that farm with your best endeavour; you were  under no superintendence; you were on parole; and you have  broke your bargain; and to all who look closely; and yourself  among the rest if you have moral eyesight; you are a thief。   Or take the case of men of letters。  Every piece of work  which is not as good as you can make it; which you have  palmed off imperfect; meagrely thought; niggardly in  execution; upon mankind who is your paymaster on parole and  in a sense your pupil; every hasty or slovenly or untrue  performance; should rise up against you in the court of your  own heart and condemn you for a thief。  Have you a salary?   If you trifle with your health; and so render yourself less  capable for duty; and still touch; and still greedily pocket  the emolument … what are you but a thief?  Have you double  accounts? do you by any time…honoured juggle; deceit; or  ambiguous process; gain more from those who deal with you  than it you were bargaining and dealing face to face in front  of God? … What are you but a thief?  Lastly; if you fill an  office; or produce an article; which; in your heart of  hearts; you think a delusion and a fraud upon mankind; and  still draw your salary and go through the sham manoeuvres of  this office; or still book your profits and keep on flooding  the world with these injurious goods? … though you were old;  and bald; and the first at church; and a baronet; what are  you but a thief?  These may seem hard words and mere  curiosities of the intellect; in an age when the spirit of  honesty is so sparingly cultivated that all business is  conducted upon lies and so…called customs of the trade; that  not a man bestows two thoughts on the utility or  honourableness of his pursuit。  I would say less if I thought  less。  But looking to my own reason and the right of things;  I can only avow that I am a thief myself; and that I  passionately suspect my neighbours of the same guilt。

Where did you hear that it was easy to be honest?  Do you  find that in your Bible?  Easy!  It is easy to be an ass and  follow the multitude like a blind; besotted bull in a  stampede; and that; I am well aware; is what you and Mrs。  Grundy mean by being honest。  But it will not bear the stress  of time nor the scrutiny of conscience。  Even before the  lowest of all tribunals; … before a court of law; whose  business it is; not to keep men right; or within a thousand  miles of right; but to withhold them from going so tragically  wrong that they will pull down the whole jointed fabric of  society by their misdeeds … even before a court of law; as we  begin to see in these last days; our easy view of following  at each other's tails; alike to good and evil; is beginning  to be reproved and punished; and declared no honesty at all;  but open theft and swindling; and simpletons who have gone on  through life with a quiet conscience may learn suddenly; from  the lips of a judge; that the custom of the trade may be a  custom of the devil。  You thought it was easy to be honest。   Did you think it was easy to be just and kind and truthful?   Did you think the whole duty of aspiring man was as simple as  a horn…pipe? and you could walk through life like a gentleman  and a hero; with no more concern than it takes to go to  church or to address a circular?  And yet all this time you  had the eighth commandment! and; what makes it richer; you  would not have broken it for the world!

The truth is; that these commandments by themselves are of  little use in private judgment。  If compression is what you  want; you have their whole spirit compressed into the golden  rule; and yet there expressed with more significance; since  the law is there spiritually and not materially stated。  And  in truth; four out of these ten commands; from the sixth to  the ninth; are rather legal than ethical。  The police…court  is their proper home。  A magistrate cannot tell whether you  love your neighbour as yourself; but he can tell more or less  whether you have murdered; or stolen; or committed adultery;  or held up your hand and testified to that which was not; and  these things; for rough practical tests; are as good as can  be found。  And perhaps; therefore; the best condensation of  the Jewish moral law is in the maxims of the priests;  'neminem laedere' and 'suum cuique tribuere。'  But all this  granted; it becomes only the more plain that they are  inadequate in the sphere of personal morality; that while  they tell the magistrate roughly when to punish; they can  never direct an anxious sinner what to do。

Only Polonius;

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