lectures14+15-第11节
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and respects; whether for persons or for things; that make for
conservation。 Yet the fact remains that war is a school of
strenuous life and heroism; and; being in the line of aboriginal
instinct; is the only school that as yet is universally
available。 But when we gravely ask ourselves whether this
wholesale organization of irrationality and crime be our only
bulwark against effeminacy; we stand aghast at the thought; and
think more kindly of ascetic religion。 One hears of the
mechanical equivalent of heat。 What we now need to discover in
the social realm is the moral equivalent of war: something
heroic that will speak to men as universally as war does; and yet
will be as compatible with their spiritual selves as war has
proved itself to be incompatible。 I have often thought that in
the old monkish poverty…worship; in spite of the pedantry which
infested it; there might be something like that moral equivalent
of war which we are seeking。 May not voluntarily accepted
poverty be 〃the strenuous life;〃 without the need of crushing
weaker peoples?
Poverty indeed IS the strenuous lifewithout brass bands or
uniforms or hysteric popular applause or lies or circumlocutions;
and when one sees the way in which wealth… getting enters as an
ideal into the very bone and marrow of our generation; one
wonders whether a revival of the belief that poverty is a worthy
religious vocation may not be 〃the transformation of military
courage;〃 and the spiritual reform which our time stands most in
need of。
Among us English…speaking peoples especially do the praises of
poverty need once more to be boldly sung。 We have grown
literally afraid to be poor。 We despise any one who elects to be
poor in order to simplify and save his inner life。 If he does
not join the general scramble and pant with the money…making
street; we deem him spiritless and lacking in ambition。 We have
lost the power even of imagining what the ancient idealization of
poverty could have meant: the liberation from material
attachments; the unbribed soul; the manlier indifference; the
paying our way by what we are or do and not by what we have; the
right to fling away our life at any moment irresponsiblythe
more athletic trim; in short; the moral fighting shape。 When we
of the so…called better classes are scared as men were never
scared in history at material ugliness and hardship; when we put
off marriage until our house can be artistic; and quake at the
thought of having a child without a bank…account and doomed to
manual labor; it is time for thinking men to protest against so
unmanly and irreligious a state of opinion。
It is true that so far as wealth gives time for ideal ends and
exercise to ideal energies; wealth is better than poverty and
ought to be chosen。 But wealth does this in only a portion of
the actual cases。 Elsewhere the desire to gain wealth and the
fear to lose it are our chief breeders of cowardice and
propagators of corruption。 There are thousands of conjunctures
in which a wealth…bound man must be a slave; whilst a man for
whom poverty has no terrors becomes a freeman。 Think of the
strength which personal indifference to poverty would give us if
we were devoted to unpopular causes。 We need no longer hold our
tongues or fear to vote the revolutionary or reformatory ticket。
Our stocks might fall; our hopes of promotion vanish; our
salaries stop; our club doors close in our faces; yet; while we
lived; we would imperturbably bear witness to the spirit; and our
example would help to set free our generation。 The cause would
need its funds; but we its servants would be potent in proportion
as we personally were contented with our poverty。
I recommend this matter to your serious pondering; for it is
certain that the prevalent fear of poverty among the educated
classes is the worst moral disease from which our civilization
suffers。
I have now said all that I can usefully say about the several
fruits of religion as they are manifested in saintly lives; so I
will make a brief review and pass to my more general conclusions。
Our question; you will remember; is as to whether religion stands
approved by its fruits; as these are exhibited in the saintly
type of character。 Single attributes of saintliness may; it is
true; be temperamental endowments; found in non…religious
individuals。 But the whole group of them forms a combination
which; as such; is religious; for it seems to flow from the sense
of the divine as from its psychological centre。 Whoever
possesses strongly this sense comes naturally to think that the
smallest details of this world derive infinite significance from
their relation to an unseen divine order。 The thought of this
order yields him a superior denomination of happiness; and a
steadfastness of soul with which no other can compare。 In social
relations his serviceability is exemplary; he abounds in impulses
to help。 His help is inward as well as outward; for his sympathy
reaches souls as well as bodies; and kindles unsuspected
faculties therein。 Instead of placing happiness where common men
place it; in comfort; he places it in a higher kind of inner
excitement; which converts discomforts into sources of cheer and
annuls unhappiness。 So he turns his back upon no duty; however
thankless; and when we are in need of assistance; we can count
upon the saint lending his hand with more certainty than we can
count upon any other person。 Finally; his humble…mindedness and
his ascetic tendencies save him from the petty personal
pretensions which so obstruct our ordinary social intercourse;
and his purity gives us in him a clean man for a companion。
Felicity; purity; charity; patience; self…severitythese are
splendid excellencies; and the saint of all men shows them in the
completest possible measure。
But; as we saw; all these things together do not make saints
infallible。 When their intellectual outlook is narrow; they fall
into all sorts of holy excesses; fanaticism or theopathic
absorption; self…torment; prudery; scrupulosity; gullibility; and
morbid inability to meet the world。 By the very intensity of his
fidelity to the paltry ideals with which an inferior intellect
may inspire him; a saint can be even more objectionable and
damnable than a superficial carnal man would be in the same
situation。 We must judge him not sentimentally only; and not in
isolation; but using our own intellectual standards; placing him
in his environment; and estimating his total function。
Now in the matter of intellectual standards; we must bear in mind
that it is unfair; where we find narrowness of mind; always to
impute it as a vice to the individual; for in religious and
theological matters he probably absorbs his narrowness from his
generation。 Moreover; we must not confound the essentials of
saintliness; which are those general passions of which I have
spoken; with its accidents; which are the special determinations
of these passions at any historical moment。 In these
determinations the saints will usually be loyal to the temporary
idols of their tribe。 Taking refuge in monasteries was as much
an idol of the tribe in the middle ages; as bearing a hand in the
world's work is to…day。 Saint Francis or Saint Bernard; were
they living to…day; would undoubtedly be leading consecrated
lives of some sort; but quite as undoubtedly they would not lead
them in retirement。 Our animosity to special historic
manifestations must not lead us to give away the saintly impulses
in their essential nature to the tender mercies of inimical
critics。
The most inimical critic of the saintly impulses whom I know is
Nietzsche。 He contrasts them with the worldly passions as we
find these embodied in the predaceous military character;
altogether to the advantage of the latter。 Your born saint; it
must be confessed; has something about him which often makes the
gorge of a carnal man rise; so it will be worth while to consider
the contrast in question more fully。
Dislike of the saintly nature seems to be a negative result of
the biologically useful instinct of welcoming leadership; and
glorifying the chief of the tribe。 The chief is the potential;
if not the actual tyrant; the masterful; overpowering man of
prey。 We confess our inferiority and grovel before him。 We