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第4章

the essays of montaigne, v4-第4章

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motion。'Herodotus; iii。 38。' Every one does the same; for use veils
from us the true aspect of things。

         〃Nil adeo magnum; nec tam mirabile quidquam
          Principio; quod non minuant mirarier omnes Paullatim。〃

     '〃There is nothing at first so grand; so admirable; which by degrees
     people do not regard with less admiration。〃Lucretius; ii。 1027'

Taking upon me once to justify something in use amongst us; and that was
received with absolute authority for a great many leagues round about us;
and not content; as men commonly do; to establish it only by force of law
and example; but inquiring still further into its origin; I found the
foundation so weak; that I who made it my business to confirm others; was
very near being dissatisfied myself。  'Tis by this receipt that Plato 
'Laws; viii。  6。' undertakes to cure the unnatural and preposterous
loves of his time; as one which he esteems of sovereign virtue; namely;
that the public opinion condemns them; that the poets; and all other
sorts of writers; relate horrible stories of them; a recipe; by virtue of
which the most beautiful daughters no more allure their fathers' lust;
nor brothers; of the finest shape and fashion; their sisters' desire; the
very fables of Thyestes; OEdipus; and Macareus; having with the harmony
of their song; infused this wholesome opinion and belief into the tender
brains of children。  Chastity is; in truth; a great and shining virtue;
and of which the utility is sufficiently known; but to treat of it; and
to set it off in its true value; according to nature; is as hard as 'tis
easy to do so according to custom; laws; and precepts。  The fundamental
and universal reasons are of very obscure and difficult research; and our
masters either lightly pass them over; or not daring so much as to touch
them; precipitate themselves into the liberty and protection of custom;
there puffing themselves out and triumphing to their heart's content:
such as will not suffer themselves to be withdrawn from this original
source; do yet commit a greater error; and subject themselves to wild
opinions; witness Chrysippus;'Sextus Empiricus; Pyyrhon。  Hypotyp。; i。
14。' who; in so many of his writings; has strewed the little account he
made of incestuous conjunctions; committed with how near relations
soever。

Whoever would disengage himself from this violent prejudice of custom;
would find several things received with absolute and undoubting opinion;
that have no other support than the hoary head and rivelled face of
ancient usage。  But the mask taken off; and things being referred to the
decision of truth and reason; he will find his judgment as it were
altogether overthrown; and yet restored to a much more sure estate。  For
example; I shall ask him; what can be more strange than to see a people
obliged to obey laws they never understood; bound in all their domestic
affairs; as marriages; donations; wills; sales; and purchases; to rules
they cannot possibly know; being neither written nor published in their
own language; and of which they are of necessity to purchase both the
interpretation and the use?  Not according to the ingenious opinion of
Isocrates; 'Discourse to Nicocles。' who counselled his king to make
the traffics and negotiations of his subjects; free; frank; and of profit
to them; and their quarrels and disputes burdensome; and laden with heavy
impositions and penalties; but; by a prodigious opinion; to make sale of
reason itself; and to give to laws a course of merchandise。  I think
myself obliged to fortune that; as our historians report; it was a Gascon
gentleman; a countryman of mine; who first opposed Charlemagne; when he
attempted to impose upon us Latin and imperial laws。

What can be more savage; than to see a nation where; by lawful custom;
the office of a judge is bought and sold; where judgments are paid for
with ready money; and where justice may legitimately be denied to him
that has not wherewithal to pay; a merchandise in so great repute; as in
a government to create a fourth estate of wrangling lawyers; to add to
the three ancient ones of the church; nobility; and people; which fourth
estate; having the laws in their own hands; and sovereign power over
men's lives and fortunes; makes another body separate from nobility:
whence it comes to pass; that there are double laws; those of honour and
those of justice; in many things altogether opposite one to another; the
nobles as rigorously condemning a lie taken; as the other do a lie
revenged: by the law of arms; he shall be degraded from all nobility and
honour who puts up with an affront; and by the civil law; he who
vindicates his reputation by revenge incurs a capital punishment: he who
applies himself to the law for reparation of an offence done to his
honour; disgraces himself; and he who does not; is censured and punished
by the law。  Yet of these two so different things; both of them referring
to one head; the one has the charge of peace; the other of war; those
have the profit; these the honour; those the wisdom; these the virtue;
those the word; these the action; those justice; these valour; those
reason; these force; those the long robe; these the short;divided
betwixt them。

For what concerns indifferent things; as clothes; who is there seeking to
bring them back to their true use; which is the body's service and
convenience; and upon which their original grace and fitness depend; for
the most fantastic; in my opinion; that can be imagined; I will instance
amongst others; our flat caps; that long tail of velvet that hangs down
from our women's heads; with its party…coloured trappings; and that vain
and futile model of a member we cannot in modesty so much as name; which;
nevertheless; we make show and parade of in public。  These
considerations; notwithstanding; will not prevail upon any understanding
man to decline the common mode; but; on the contrary; methinks; all
singular and particular fashions are rather marks of folly and vain
affectation than of sound reason; and that a wise man; within; ought to
withdraw and retire his soul from the crowd; and there keep it at liberty
and in power to judge freely of things; but as to externals; absolutely
to follow and conform himself to the fashion of the time。  Public society
has nothing to do with our thoughts; but the rest; as our actions; our
labours; our fortunes; and our lives; we are to lend and abandon them to
its service and to the common opinion; as did that good and great
Socrates who refused to preserve his life by a disobedience to the
magistrate; though a very wicked and unjust one for it is the rule of
rules; the general law of laws; that every one observe those of the place
wherein he lives。

          '〃It is good to obey the laws of one's country。〃
          Excerpta ex Trag。 Gyaecis; Grotio interp。; 1626; p。 937。'

And now to another point。  It is a very great doubt; whether any so
manifest benefit can accrue from the alteration of a law received; let it
be what it will; as there is danger and inconvenience in altering it;
forasmuch as government is a structure composed of divers parts and
members joined and united together; with so strict connection; that it is
impossible to stir so much as one brick or stone; but the whole body will
be sensible of it。  The legislator of the Thurians 'Charondas; Diod。
Sic。; xii。  24。' ordained; that whosoever would go about either to
abolish an old law; or to establish a new; should present himself with a
halter about his neck to the people; to the end; that if the innovation
he would introduce should not be approved by every one; he might
immediately be hanged; and he of the Lacedaemonians employed his life to
obtain from his citizens a faithful promise that none of his laws should
be violated。'Lycurgus; Plutarch; in Vita; c。  22。' The Ephoros who so
rudely cut the two strings that Phrynis had added to music never stood to
examine whether that addition made better harmony; or that by its means
the instrument was more full and complete; it was enough for him to
condemn the invention; that it was a novelty; and an alteration of the
old fashion。  Which also is the mea

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