<h3><!-- page 16--><SPAN name="page16"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>DIALOGUE III.</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">Plato</span>—<span class="smcap">Fenelon</span>.</p>
<p><i>Plato</i>.—Welcome to Elysium, O thou, the most pure, the
most gentle, the most refined disciple of philosophy that the world
in modern times has produced! Sage Fenelon, welcome!—I need
not name myself to you. Our souls by sympathy must know one another.</p>
<p><i>Fenelon</i>.—I know you to be Plato, the most amiable of
all the disciples of Socrates, and the philosopher of all antiquity
whom I most desired to resemble.</p>
<p><i>Plato</i>.—Homer and Orpheus are impatient to see you in
that region of these happy fields which their shades inhabit.
They both acknowledge you to be a great poet, though you have written
no verses. And they are now busy in composing for you unfading
wreaths of all the finest and sweetest Elysian flowers. But I
will lead you from them to the sacred grove of philosophy, on the highest
hill of Elysium, where the air is most pure and most serene. I
will conduct you to the fountain of wisdom, in which you will see, as
in your own writings, the fair image of virtue perpetually reflected.
It will raise in you more love than was felt by Narcissus, when he contemplated
the beauty of his own face in the unruffled spring. But you shall
not pine, as he did, for a shadow. The goddess herself will affectionately
meet your embraces and mingle with your soul.</p>
<p><i>Fenelon</i>.—I find you retain the allegorical and poetical
style, of which you were so fond in many of your writings. Mine
also run sometimes into poetry, particularly in my “Telemachus,”
which I meant to make a kind of epic composition. But I dare not
rank myself among the great poets, nor pretend to any equality in oratory
with you, the most eloquent of philosophers, on whose lips the Attic
bees distilled all their honey.</p>
<p><i>Plato</i>.—The French language is not so harmonious as the
<!-- page 17--><SPAN name="page17"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Greek,
yet you have given a sweetness to it which equally charms the ear and
heart. When one reads your compositions, one thinks that one hears
Apollo’s lyre, strung by the hands of the Graces, and tuned by
the Muses. The idea of a perfect king, which you have exhibited
in your “Telemachus,” far excels, in my own judgment, my
imaginary “Republic.” Your “Dialogues”
breathe the pure spirit of virtue, of unaffected good sense, of just
criticism, of fine taste. They are in general as superior to your
countryman Fontenelle’s as reason is to false wit, or truth to
affectation. The greatest fault of them, I think, is, that some
are too short.</p>
<p><i>Fenelon</i>.—It has been objected to them—and I am
sensible of it myself—that most of them are too full of commonplace
morals. But I wrote them for the instruction of a young prince,
and one cannot too forcibly imprint on the minds of those who are born
to empire the most simple truths; because, as they grow up, the flattery
of a court will try to disguise and conceal from them those truths,
and to eradicate from their hearts the love of their duty, if it has
not taken there a very deep root.</p>
<p><i>Plato</i>.—It is, indeed, the peculiar misfortune of princes,
that they are often instructed with great care in the refinements of
policy, and not taught the first principles of moral obligations, or
taught so superficially that the virtuous man is soon lost in the corrupt
politician. But the lessons of virtue you gave your royal pupil
are so graced by the charms of your eloquence that the oldest and wisest
men may attend to them with pleasure. All your writings are embellished
with a sublime and agreeable imagination, which gives elegance to simplicity,
and dignity to the most vulgar and obvious truths. I have heard,
indeed, that your countrymen are less sensible of the beauty of your
genius and style than any of their neighbours. What has so much
depraved their taste?</p>
<p><i>Fenelon</i>.—That which depraved the taste of the Romans
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the ago of Augustus—an immoderate love of wit, of paradox, of
refinement. The works of their writers, like the faces of their
women, must be painted and adorned with artificial embellishments to
attract their regards. And thus the natural beauty of both is
lost. But it is no wonder if few of them esteem my “Telemachus,”
as the maxims I have principally inculcated there are thought by many
inconsistent with the grandeur of their monarchy, and with the splendour
of a refined and opulent nation. They seem generally to be falling
into opinions that the chief end of society is to procure the pleasures
of luxury; that a nice and elegant taste of voluptuous enjoyments is
the perfection of merit; and that a king, who is gallant, magnificent,
liberal, who builds a fine palace, who furnishes it well with good statues
and pictures, who encourages the fine arts, and makes them subservient
to every modish vice, who has a restless ambition, a perfidious policy,
and a spirit of conquest, is better for them than a Numa or a Marcus
Aurelius. Whereas to check the excesses of luxury—those
excesses, I mean, which enfeeble the spirit of a nation—to ease
the people, as much as is possible, of the burden of taxes; to give
them the blessings of peace and tranquillity, when they can he obtained
without injury or dishonour; to make them frugal, and hardy, and masculine
in the temper of their bodies and minds, that they may be the fitter
for war whenever it does come upon them; but, above all, to watch diligently
over their morals, and discourage whatever may defile or corrupt them—is
the great business of government, and ought to be in all circumstances
the principal object of a wise legislature. Unquestionably that
is the happiest country which has most virtue in it; and to the eye
of sober reason the poorest Swiss canton is a much nobler state than
the kingdom of France, if it has more liberty, better morals, a more
settled tranquillity, more moderation in prosperity, and more firmness
in danger.</p>
<p><i>Plato</i>.—Your notions are just, and if your country rejects
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she will not long hold the rank of the first nation in Europe.
Her declension is begun, her ruin approaches; for, omitting all other
arguments, can a state be well served when the raising of an opulent
fortune in its service, and making a splendid use of that fortune, is
a distinction more envied than any which arises from integrity in office
or public spirit in government? Can that spirit, which is the
parent of national greatness, continue vigorous and diffusive where
the desire of wealth, for the sake of a luxury which wealth alone can
support, and an ambition aspiring, not to glory, but to profit, are
the predominant passions? If it exists in a king or a minister
of state, how will either of them find among a people so disposed the
necessary instruments to execute his great designs; or, rather, what
obstruction will he not find from the continual opposition of private
interest to public? But if, on the contrary, a court inclines
to tyranny, what a facility will be given by these dispositions to that
evil purpose? How will men with minds relaxed by the enervating
ease and softness of luxury have vigour to oppose it? Will not
most of them lean to servitude, as their natural state, as that in which
the extravagant and insatiable cravings of their artificial wants may
best be gratified at the charge of a bountiful master or by the spoils
of an enslaved and ruined people? When all sense of public virtue
is thus destroyed, will not fraud, corruption, and avarice, or the opposite
workings of court factions to bring disgrace on each other, ruin armies
and fleets without the help of an enemy, and give up the independence
of the nation to foreigners, after having betrayed its liberties to
a king? All these mischiefs you saw attendant on that luxury,
which some modern philosophers account (as I am informed) the highest
good to a state! Time will show that their doctrines are pernicious
to society, pernicious to government; and that yours, tempered and moderated
so as to render them more practicable in the present circumstances of
your country, are wise, salutary, and deserving <!-- page 20--><SPAN name="page20"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>of
the general thanks of mankind. But lest you should think, from
the praise I have given you, that flattery can find a place in Elysium,
allow me to lament, with the tender sorrow of a friend, that a man so
superior to all other follies could give into the reveries of a Madame
Guyon, a distracted enthusiast. How strange was it to see the
two great lights of France, you and the Bishop of Meaux, engaged in
a controversy whether a madwoman was a heretic or a saint!</p>
<p><i>Fenelon</i>.—I confess my own weakness, and the ridiculousness
of the dispute; but did not your warm imagination carry you also into
some reveries about divine love, in which you talked unintelligibly,
even to yourself?</p>
<p><i>Plato</i>.—I felt something more than I was able to express.</p>
<p><i>Fenelon</i>.—I had my feelings too, as fine and as lively
as yours; but we should both have done better to have avoided those
subjects in which sentiment took the place of reason.</p>
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