The Pleasures of Life. Sir John Lubbock

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Название The Pleasures of Life
Автор произведения Sir John Lubbock
Жанр Языкознание
Серия
Издательство Языкознание
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4057664631657



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with the shipwrecked mariner of De Foe."

      Carlyle has wisely said that a collection of books is a real university.

      The importance of books has been appreciated in many quarters where we might least expect it. Among the hardy Norsemen runes were supposed to be endowed with miraculous power. There is an Arabic proverb, that "a wise man's day is worth a fool's life," and another—though it reflects perhaps rather the spirit of the Califs than of the Sultans—that "the ink of science is more precious than the blood of the martyrs."

      Confucius is said to have described himself as a man who "in his eager pursuit of knowledge forgot his food, who in the joy of its attainment forgot his sorrows, and did not even perceive that old age was coming on."

      Yet, if this could be said by the Arabs and the Chinese, what language can be strong enough to express the gratitude we ought to feel for the advantages we enjoy! We do not appreciate, I think, our good fortune in belonging to the nineteenth century. Sometimes, indeed, one may even be inclined to wish that one had not lived quite so soon, and to long for a glimpse of the books, even the school-books, of one hundred years hence. A hundred years ago not only were books extremely expensive and cumbrous, but many of the most delightful were still uncreated—such as the works of Scott, Thackeray, Dickens, Bulwer Lytton, and Trollope, not to mention living authors. How much more interesting science has become especially, if I were to mention only one name, through the genius of Darwin! Renan has characterized this as a most amusing century; I should rather have described it as most interesting: presenting us as it does with an endless vista of absorbing problems; with infinite opportunities; with more interest and less danger than surrounded our less fortunate ancestors.

      Cicero described a room without books, as a body without a soul. But it is by no means necessary to be a philosopher to love reading.

      Reading, indeed, is by no means necessarily study. Far from it. "I put," says Mr. Frederic Harrison, in his excellent article on the "Choice of Books," "I put the poetic and emotional side of literature as the most needed for daily use."

      In the prologue to the Legende of Goode Women, Chaucer says:

      "And as for me, though that I konne but lyte,

       On bokes for to rede I me delyte,

       And to him give I feyth and ful credence,

       And in myn herte have him in reverence,

       So hertely, that ther is game noon,

       That fro my bokes maketh me to goon,

       But yt be seldome on the holy day,

       Save, certynly, when that the monthe of May

       Is comen, and that I here the foules synge,

       And that the floures gynnen for to sprynge,

       Farwel my boke and my devocion."

      But I doubt whether, if he had enjoyed our advantages, he could have been so certain of tearing himself away, even in the month of May.

      Macaulay, who had all that wealth and fame, rank and talents could give, yet, we are told, derived his greatest happiness from books. Sir G. Trevelyan, in his charming biography, says that—"of the feelings which Macaulay entertained toward the great minds of bygone ages it is not for any one except himself to speak. He has told us how his debt to them was incalculable; how they guided him to truth; how they filled his mind with noble and graceful images; how they stood by him in all vicissitudes—comforters in sorrow, nurses in sickness, companions in solitude, the old friends who are never seen with new faces; who are the same in wealth and in poverty, in glory and in obscurity. Great as were the honors and possessions which Macaulay acquired by his pen, all who knew him were well aware that the titles and rewards which he gained by his own works were as nothing in the balance compared with the pleasure he derived from the works of others."

      There was no society in London so agreeable that Macaulay would have preferred it at breakfast or at dinner "to the company of Sterne or Fielding, Horace Walpole or Boswell." The love of reading which Gibbon declared he would not exchange for all the treasures of India was, in fact, with Macaulay "a main element of happiness in one of the happiest lives that it has ever fallen to the lot of the biographer to record."

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