thoughts on man-第73章
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to commerce with the skies。 What a masterpiece of workmanship is his form; while the beauty and intelligence of Gods seems to manifest itself in his countenance! Look at that most consummate of all implements; the human hand; think of his understanding; how composed and penetrating; of the wealth of his imagination; of the resplendent virtues he is qualified to display! 〃How wonderful are thy works; Oh God; in wisdom hast thou created them all!〃
But there are other parts of the system in which we live; which do not seem to correspond with those already enumerated。 Before we proceed to people infinite space; it would be as well; if we surveyed the surface of the earth we inhabit。 What vast deserts do we find in it; what immense tracks of burning sands! One half of the globe is perhaps irreclaimable to the use of man。 Then let us think of earthquakes and tempests; of wasting hurricanes; and the number of vessels; freighted with human beings; that are yearly buried in the caverns o?the ocean。 Let us call to mind in man; the prime ornament of the creation; all the diseases to which his frame is subject;
Convulsions; epilepsies; fierce catarrhs; Intestine stone and ulcer; colic pangs; Demoniac frenzy; moping melancholy; And moon…struck madness; pining atrophy; Marasmus; and wide…wasting pestilence; Dropsies; and asthmas; and joint…racking rheums。
The very idea of our killing; and subsisting upon the flesh of animals; surely somewhat jars with our conceptions of infinite benevolence。
But; when we look at the political history of man; the case is infinitely worse。 This too often seems one tissue of misery and vice。 War; conquest; oppression; tyranny; slavery; insurrections; massacres; cruel punishments; degrading corporal infliction; and the extinction of life under the forms of law; are to be found in almost every page。 It is as if an evil demon were let loose upon us; and whole nations; from one decad of years to another; were struck with the most pernicious madness。 Certain reasoners tell us that this is owing to the freedom of will; without which man could not exist。 But here we are presented with an alternative; from which it is impossible for human understanding to escape。 Either God; according to our ideas of benevolence; would remove evil out of the world; and cannot; or he can; and will not。 If he has the will and not the power; this argues weakness; if he has the power and not the will; this seems to be malevolence。
Let us descend from the great stage of the nations; and look into the obscurities of private misery。 Which of us is happy? What bitter springs of misery overflow the human heart; and are borne by us in silence! What cruel disappointments beset us! To what struggles are we doomed; while we struggle often in vain! The human heart seems framed; as if to be the capacious receptacle of all imaginable sorrows。 The human frame seems constructed; as if all its fibres were prepared to sustain varieties of torment。 〃In the sweat of thy brow shalt thou eat bread; till thou return to the earth。〃 But how often does that sweat prove ineffective! There are men of whom sorrow seems to be the destiny; from which they can never escape。 There are hearts; into which by their constitution it appears as if serenity and content could never enter; but which are given up to all the furious passions; or are for ever the prey of repining and depression。 Ah; little think the gay; licentious proud; Whom pleasure; power and affluence surround; How many pine in want! How many shrink Into the sordid hut; how many drink The cup of grief; and eat the bitter bread Of misery!
And; which aggravates the evil; almost all the worst vices; the most unprincipled acts; and the darkest passions of the human mind; are bred out of poverty and distress。 Satan; in the Book of Job; says to the Almighty; 〃Thou hast blessed the work of thy servant; and his substance is increased in the land。 But put forth thy hand now; and take away all that he hath; and he will curse thee to thy face。〃 The prayer of Agar runs; 〃Feed me with food convenient for me; lest I be poor; and steal; and take the name of my God in vain。〃
It is with a deep knowledge of the scenes of life; that the prophet pronounces; 〃My thoughts are not your thoughts; neither are your ways my ways; saith the Lord。〃
All reflecting persons; who have surveyed the state of the world in which we live; have been struck with the contrarieties of sublunary things; and many hypotheses have been invented to solve the enigma。 Some have maintained the doctrine of two principles; Oromasdes and Arimanius; the genius of good and of evil; who are perpetually contending with each other which shall have the greatest sway in the fortunes of the world; and each alternately acquiring the upper hand。 Others have inculcated the theory of the fall of man; that God at first made all things beautiful and good; but that man has incurred his displeasure; and been turned out of the paradise for which he was destined。 Hence; they say; has arisen the corruption of our nature。 〃There is none that cloth good; no; not one。 That every mouth may be stopped; and all the world become guilty before God。〃 But the solution that has been most generally adopted; particularly in later days; is that of a future state of retribution; in which all the inequalities of our present condition shall be removed; the tears of the unfortunate and the sufferer shall be wiped from their eyes; and their agonies and miseries compensated。 This; in other words; independently of the light of revelation; is to infer infinite wisdom and benevolence from what we see; and then; finding the actual phenomena not to correspond with our theories; to invent something of which we have no knowledge; to supply the deficiency。
The astronomer however proceeds from what we see of the globe of earth; to fashion other worlds of which we have no direct knowledge。 Finding that there is no part of the soil of the earth into which our wanderings can penetrate; that is not turned to the account of rational and happy beings; creatures capable of knowing and adoring their creator; that nature does nothing in vain; and that the world is full of the evidences of his unmingled beneficence; according to our narrow and imperfect ideas of beneficence; (for such ought to be our premises) we proceed to construct millions of worlds upon the plan we have imagined。 The earth is a globe; the planets are globes; and several of them larger than our earth: the earth has a moon; several of the planets have satellites: the globe we dwell in moves in an orbit round the sun; so do the planets: upon these premises; and no more; we hold ourselves authorised to affirm that they contain 〃myriads of intelligent beings; formed for endless progression in perfection and felicity。〃 Having gone thus far; we next find that the fixed stars bear a certain resemblance to the sun; and; as the sun has a number of planets attendant on him; so; we say; has each of the fixed stars; composing all together 〃ten thousand times ten thousand〃 habitable worlds。
All this is well; so long as we view it as a bold and ingenious conjecture。 On any other subject it would be so regarded; and we should consider it as reserved for the amusement and gratification of a fanciful visionary in the hour; when he gives up the reins to his imagination。 But; backed as it is by a complexity of geometrical right lines and curves; and handed forth to us in large quartos; stuffed with calculations; it experiences a very different fortune。 We are told that; 〃by the knowledge we derive from astronomy; our faculties are enlarged; our minds exalted; and our understandings clearly convinced; and affected with the conviction; of the existence; wisdom; power; goodness; immutability and superintendency of the supreme being; so that; without an hyperbole; 'an undevout astronomer is mad'e''70'。'〃
'70' Ferguson; Astronomy; Section I。
It is singular; how deeply I was impressed with this representation; while I was a schoolboy; and was so led to propose a difficulty to the wife of the master。 I said; 〃I find that we have millions of worlds round us peopled with ratio