<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ON THE SUFFERINGS OF THE WORLD. </h2>
<p>Unless <i>suffering</i> is the direct and immediate object of life, our
existence must entirely fail of its aim. It is absurd to look upon the
enormous amount of pain that abounds everywhere in the world, and
originates in needs and necessities inseparable from life itself, as
serving no purpose at all and the result of mere chance. Each separate
misfortune, as it comes, seems, no doubt, to be something exceptional; but
misfortune in general is the rule.</p>
<p>I know of no greater absurdity than that propounded by most systems of
philosophy in declaring evil to be negative in its character. Evil is just
what is positive; it makes its own existence felt. Leibnitz is
particularly concerned to defend this absurdity; and he seeks to
strengthen his position by using a palpable and paltry sophism.<SPAN href="#linknote-1" name="linknoteref-1" id="linknoteref-1">1</SPAN> It is the
good which is negative; in other words, happiness and satisfaction always
imply some desire fulfilled, some state of pain brought to an end.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-1" id="linknote-1"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
1 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-1">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ <i>Translator's Note</i>,
cf. <i>Thèod</i>, §153.—Leibnitz argued that evil is a negative
quality—<i>i.e</i>., the absence of good; and that its active and
seemingly positive character is an incidental and not an essential part of
its nature. Cold, he said, is only the absence of the power of heat, and
the active power of expansion in freezing water is an incidental and not
an essential part of the nature of cold. The fact is, that the power of
expansion in freezing water is really an increase of repulsion amongst its
molecules; and Schopenhauer is quite right in calling the whole argument a
sophism.]</p>
<p>This explains the fact that we generally find pleasure to be not nearly so
pleasant as we expected, and pain very much more painful.</p>
<p>The pleasure in this world, it has been said, outweighs the pain; or, at
any rate, there is an even balance between the two. If the reader wishes
to see shortly whether this statement is true, let him compare the
respective feelings of two animals, one of which is engaged in eating the
other.</p>
<p>The best consolation in misfortune or affliction of any kind will be the
thought of other people who are in a still worse plight than yourself; and
this is a form of consolation open to every one. But what an awful fate
this means for mankind as a whole!</p>
<p>We are like lambs in a field, disporting themselves under the eye of the
butcher, who chooses out first one and then another for his prey. So it is
that in our good days we are all unconscious of the evil Fate may have
presently in store for us—sickness, poverty, mutilation, loss of
sight or reason.</p>
<p>No little part of the torment of existence lies in this, that Time is
continually pressing upon us, never letting us take breath, but always
coming after us, like a taskmaster with a whip. If at any moment Time
stays his hand, it is only when we are delivered over to the misery of
boredom.</p>
<p>But misfortune has its uses; for, as our bodily frame would burst asunder
if the pressure of the atmosphere was removed, so, if the lives of men
were relieved of all need, hardship and adversity; if everything they took
in hand were successful, they would be so swollen with arrogance that,
though they might not burst, they would present the spectacle of unbridled
folly—nay, they would go mad. And I may say, further, that a certain
amount of care or pain or trouble is necessary for every man at all times.
A ship without ballast is unstable and will not go straight.</p>
<p>Certain it is that <i>work, worry, labor</i> and <i>trouble</i>, form the
lot of almost all men their whole life long. But if all wishes were
fulfilled as soon as they arose, how would men occupy their lives? what
would they do with their time? If the world were a paradise of luxury and
ease, a land flowing with milk and honey, where every Jack obtained his
Jill at once and without any difficulty, men would either die of boredom
or hang themselves; or there would be wars, massacres, and murders; so
that in the end mankind would inflict more suffering on itself than it has
now to accept at the hands of Nature.</p>
<p>In early youth, as we contemplate our coming life, we are like children in
a theatre before the curtain is raised, sitting there in high spirits and
eagerly waiting for the play to begin. It is a blessing that we do not
know what is really going to happen. Could we foresee it, there are times
when children might seem like innocent prisoners, condemned, not to death,
but to life, and as yet all unconscious of what their sentence means.
Nevertheless, every man desires to reach old age; in other words, a state
of life of which it may be said: "It is bad to-day, and it will be worse
to-morrow; and so on till the worst of all."</p>
<p>If you try to imagine, as nearly as you can, what an amount of misery,
pain and suffering of every kind the sun shines upon in its course, you
will admit that it would be much better if, on the earth as little as on
the moon, the sun were able to call forth the phenomena of life; and if,
here as there, the surface were still in a crystalline state.</p>
<p>Again, you may look upon life as an unprofitable episode, disturbing the
blessed calm of non-existence. And, in any case, even though things have
gone with you tolerably well, the longer you live the more clearly you
will feel that, on the whole, life is <i>a disappointment, nay, a cheat</i>.</p>
<p>If two men who were friends in their youth meet again when they are old,
after being separated for a life-time, the chief feeling they will have at
the sight of each other will be one of complete disappointment at life as
a whole; because their thoughts will be carried back to that earlier time
when life seemed so fair as it lay spread out before them in the rosy
light of dawn, promised so much—and then performed so little. This
feeling will so completely predominate over every other that they will not
even consider it necessary to give it words; but on either side it will be
silently assumed, and form the ground-work of all they have to talk about.</p>
<p>He who lives to see two or three generations is like a man who sits some
time in the conjurer's booth at a fair, and witnesses the performance
twice or thrice in succession. The tricks were meant to be seen only once;
and when they are no longer a novelty and cease to deceive, their effect
is gone.</p>
<p>While no man is much to be envied for his lot, there are countless numbers
whose fate is to be deplored.</p>
<p>Life is a task to be done. It is a fine thing to say <i>defunctus est</i>;
it means that the man has done his task.</p>
<p>If children were brought into the world by an act of pure reason alone,
would the human race continue to exist? Would not a man rather have so
much sympathy with the coming generation as to spare it the burden of
existence? or at any rate not take it upon himself to impose that burden
upon it in cold blood.</p>
<p>I shall be told, I suppose, that my philosophy is comfortless—because
I speak the truth; and people prefer to be assured that everything the
Lord has made is good. Go to the priests, then, and leave philosophers in
peace! At any rate, do not ask us to accommodate our doctrines to the
lessons you have been taught. That is what those rascals of sham
philosophers will do for you. Ask them for any doctrine you please, and
you will get it. Your University professors are bound to preach optimism;
and it is an easy and agreeable task to upset their theories.</p>
<p>I have reminded the reader that every state of welfare, every feeling of
satisfaction, is negative in its character; that is to say, it consists in
freedom from pain, which is the positive element of existence. It follows,
therefore, that the happiness of any given life is to be measured, not by
its joys and pleasures, but by the extent to which it has been free from
suffering—from positive evil. If this is the true standpoint, the
lower animals appear to enjoy a happier destiny than man. Let us examine
the matter a little more closely.</p>
<p>However varied the forms that human happiness and misery may take, leading
a man to seek the one and shun the other, the material basis of it all is
bodily pleasure or bodily pain. This basis is very restricted: it is
simply health, food, protection from wet and cold, the satisfaction of the
sexual instinct; or else the absence of these things. Consequently, as far
as real physical pleasure is concerned, the man is not better off than the
brute, except in so far as the higher possibilities of his nervous system
make him more sensitive to every kind of pleasure, but also, it must be
remembered, to every kind of pain. But then compared with the brute, how
much stronger are the passions aroused in him! what an immeasurable
difference there is in the depth and vehemence of his emotions!—and
yet, in the one case, as in the other, all to produce the same result in
the end: namely, health, food, clothing, and so on.</p>
<p>The chief source of all this passion is that thought for what is absent
and future, which, with man, exercises such a powerful influence upon all
he does. It is this that is the real origin of his cares, his hopes, his
fears—emotions which affect him much more deeply than could ever be
the case with those present joys and sufferings to which the brute is
confined. In his powers of reflection, memory and foresight, man
possesses, as it were, a machine for condensing and storing up his
pleasures and his sorrows. But the brute has nothing of the kind; whenever
it is in pain, it is as though it were suffering for the first time, even
though the same thing should have previously happened to it times out of
number. It has no power of summing up its feelings. Hence its careless and
placid temper: how much it is to be envied! But in man reflection comes
in, with all the emotions to which it gives rise; and taking up the same
elements of pleasure and pain which are common to him and the brute, it
develops his susceptibility to happiness and misery to such a degree that,
at one moment the man is brought in an instant to a state of delight that
may even prove fatal, at another to the depths of despair and suicide.</p>
<p>If we carry our analysis a step farther, we shall find that, in order to
increase his pleasures, man has intentionally added to the number and
pressure of his needs, which in their original state were not much more
difficult to satisfy than those of the brute. Hence luxury in all its
forms; delicate food, the use of tobacco and opium, spirituous liquors,
fine clothes, and the thousand and one things than he considers necessary
to his existence.</p>
<p>And above and beyond all this, there is a separate and peculiar source of
pleasure, and consequently of pain, which man has established for himself,
also as the result of using his powers of reflection; and this occupies
him out of all proportion to its value, nay, almost more than all his
other interests put together—I mean ambition and the feeling of
honor and shame; in plain words, what he thinks about the opinion other
people have of him. Taking a thousand forms, often very strange ones, this
becomes the goal of almost all the efforts he makes that are not rooted in
physical pleasure or pain. It is true that besides the sources of pleasure
which he has in common with the brute, man has the pleasures of the mind
as well. These admit of many gradations, from the most innocent trifling
or the merest talk up to the highest intellectual achievements; but there
is the accompanying boredom to be set against them on the side of
suffering. Boredom is a form of suffering unknown to brutes, at any rate
in their natural state; it is only the very cleverest of them who show
faint traces of it when they are domesticated; whereas in the case of man
it has become a downright scourge. The crowd of miserable wretches whose
one aim in life is to fill their purses but never to put anything into
their heads, offers a singular instance of this torment of boredom. Their
wealth becomes a punishment by delivering them up to misery of having
nothing to do; for, to escape it, they will rush about in all directions,
traveling here, there and everywhere. No sooner do they arrive in a place
than they are anxious to know what amusements it affords; just as though
they were beggars asking where they could receive a dole! Of a truth, need
and boredom are the two poles of human life. Finally, I may mention that
as regards the sexual relation, a man is committed to a peculiar
arrangement which drives him obstinately to choose one person. This
feeling grows, now and then, into a more or less passionate love,<SPAN href="#linknote-2" name="linknoteref-2" id="linknoteref-2">2</SPAN> which is
the source of little pleasure and much suffering.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-2" id="linknote-2"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
2 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-2">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ I have treated this subject
at length in a special chapter of the second volume of my chief work.]</p>
<p>It is, however, a wonderful thing that the mere addition of thought should
serve to raise such a vast and lofty structure of human happiness and
misery; resting, too, on the same narrow basis of joy and sorrow as man
holds in common with the brute, and exposing him to such violent emotions,
to so many storms of passion, so much convulsion of feeling, that what he
has suffered stands written and may be read in the lines on his face. And
yet, when all is told, he has been struggling ultimately for the very same
things as the brute has attained, and with an incomparably smaller
expenditure of passion and pain.</p>
<p>But all this contributes to increase the measures of suffering in human
life out of all proportion to its pleasures; and the pains of life are
made much worse for man by the fact that death is something very real to
him. The brute flies from death instinctively without really knowing what
it is, and therefore without ever contemplating it in the way natural to a
man, who has this prospect always before his eyes. So that even if only a
few brutes die a natural death, and most of them live only just long
enough to transmit their species, and then, if not earlier, become the
prey of some other animal,—whilst man, on the other hand, manages to
make so-called natural death the rule, to which, however, there are a good
many exceptions,—the advantage is on the side of the brute, for the
reason stated above. But the fact is that man attains the natural term of
years just as seldom as the brute; because the unnatural way in which he
lives, and the strain of work and emotion, lead to a degeneration of the
race; and so his goal is not often reached.</p>
<p>The brute is much more content with mere existence than man; the plant is
wholly so; and man finds satisfaction in it just in proportion as he is
dull and obtuse. Accordingly, the life of the brute carries less of sorrow
with it, but also less of joy, when compared with the life of man; and
while this may be traced, on the one side, to freedom from the torment of
<i>care</i> and <i>anxiety</i>, it is also due to the fact that <i>hope</i>,
in any real sense, is unknown to the brute. It is thus deprived of any
share in that which gives us the most and best of our joys and pleasures,
the mental anticipation of a happy future, and the inspiriting play of
phantasy, both of which we owe to our power of imagination. If the brute
is free from care, it is also, in this sense, without hope; in either
case, because its consciousness is limited to the present moment, to what
it can actually see before it. The brute is an embodiment of present
impulses, and hence what elements of fear and hope exist in its nature—and
they do not go very far—arise only in relation to objects that lie
before it and within reach of those impulses: whereas a man's range of
vision embraces the whole of his life, and extends far into the past and
future.</p>
<p>Following upon this, there is one respect in which brutes show real wisdom
when compared with us—I mean, their quiet, placid enjoyment of the
present moment. The tranquillity of mind which this seems to give them
often puts us to shame for the many times we allow our thoughts and our
cares to make us restless and discontented. And, in fact, those pleasures
of hope and anticipation which I have been mentioning are not to be had
for nothing. The delight which a man has in hoping for and looking forward
to some special satisfaction is a part of the real pleasure attaching to
it enjoyed in advance. This is afterwards deducted; for the more we look
forward to anything, the less satisfaction we find in it when it comes.
But the brute's enjoyment is not anticipated, and therefore, suffers no
deduction; so that the actual pleasure of the moment comes to it whole and
unimpaired. In the same way, too, evil presses upon the brute only with
its own intrinsic weight; whereas with us the fear of its coming often
makes its burden ten times more grievous.</p>
<p>It is just this characteristic way in which the brute gives itself up
entirely to the present moment that contributes so much to the delight we
take in our domestic pets. They are the present moment personified, and in
some respects they make us feel the value of every hour that is free from
trouble and annoyance, which we, with our thoughts and preoccupations,
mostly disregard. But man, that selfish and heartless creature, misuses
this quality of the brute to be more content than we are with mere
existence, and often works it to such an extent that he allows the brute
absolutely nothing more than mere, bare life. The bird which was made so
that it might rove over half of the world, he shuts up into the space of a
cubic foot, there to die a slow death in longing and crying for freedom;
for in a cage it does not sing for the pleasure of it. And when I see how
man misuses the dog, his best friend; how he ties up this intelligent
animal with a chain, I feel the deepest sympathy with the brute and
burning indignation against its master.</p>
<p>We shall see later that by taking a very high standpoint it is possible to
justify the sufferings of mankind. But this justification cannot apply to
animals, whose sufferings, while in a great measure brought about by men,
are often considerable even apart from their agency.<SPAN href="#linknote-3"
name="linknoteref-3" id="linknoteref-3">3</SPAN> And so we are forced to ask,
Why and for what purpose does all this torment and agony exist? There is
nothing here to give the will pause; it is not free to deny itself and so
obtain redemption. There is only one consideration that may serve to
explain the sufferings of animals. It is this: that the will to live,
which underlies the whole world of phenomena, must, in their case satisfy
its cravings by feeding upon itself. This it does by forming a gradation
of phenomena, every one of which exists at the expense of another. I have
shown, however, that the capacity for suffering is less in animals than in
man. Any further explanation that may be given of their fate will be in
the nature of hypothesis, if not actually mythical in its character; and I
may leave the reader to speculate upon the matter for himself.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-3" id="linknote-3"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
3 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-3">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Cf. <i>Welt als Wille und
Vorstellung</i>, vol. ii. p. 404.]</p>
<p><i>Brahma</i> is said to have produced the world by a kind of fall or
mistake; and in order to atone for his folly, he is bound to remain in it
himself until he works out his redemption. As an account of the origin of
things, that is admirable! According to the doctrines of <i>Buddhism</i>,
the world came into being as the result of some inexplicable disturbance
in the heavenly calm of Nirvana, that blessed state obtained by expiation,
which had endured so long a time—the change taking place by a kind
of fatality. This explanation must be understood as having at bottom some
moral bearing; although it is illustrated by an exactly parallel theory in
the domain of physical science, which places the origin of the sun in a
primitive streak of mist, formed one knows not how. Subsequently, by a
series of moral errors, the world became gradually worse and worse—true
of the physical orders as well—until it assumed the dismal aspect it
wears to-day. Excellent! The <i>Greeks</i> looked upon the world and the
gods as the work of an inscrutable necessity. A passable explanation: we
may be content with it until we can get a better. Again, <i>Ormuzd</i> and
<i>Ahriman</i> are rival powers, continually at war. That is not bad. But
that a God like Jehovah should have created this world of misery and woe,
out of pure caprice, and because he enjoyed doing it, and should then have
clapped his hands in praise of his own work, and declared everything to be
very good—that will not do at all! In its explanation of the origin
of the world, Judaism is inferior to any other form of religious doctrine
professed by a civilized nation; and it is quite in keeping with this that
it is the only one which presents no trace whatever of any belief in the
immortality of the soul.<SPAN href="#linknote-4" name="linknoteref-4" id="linknoteref-4">4</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-4" id="linknote-4"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
4 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-4">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ See <i>Parerga</i>, vol. i.
pp. 139 <i>et seq</i>.]</p>
<p>Even though Leibnitz' contention, that this is the best of all possible
worlds, were correct, that would not justify God in having created it. For
he is the Creator not of the world only, but of possibility itself; and,
therefore, he ought to have so ordered possibility as that it would admit
of something better.</p>
<p>There are two things which make it impossible to believe that this world
is the successful work of an all-wise, all-good, and, at the same time,
all-powerful Being; firstly, the misery which abounds in it everywhere;
and secondly, the obvious imperfection of its highest product, man, who is
a burlesque of what he should be. These things cannot be reconciled with
any such belief. On the contrary, they are just the facts which support
what I have been saying; they are our authority for viewing the world as
the outcome of our own misdeeds, and therefore, as something that had
better not have been. Whilst, under the former hypothesis, they amount to
a bitter accusation against the Creator, and supply material for sarcasm;
under the latter they form an indictment against our own nature, our own
will, and teach us a lesson of humility. They lead us to see that, like
the children of a libertine, we come into the world with the burden of sin
upon us; and that it is only through having continually to atone for this
sin that our existence is so miserable, and that its end is death.</p>
<p>There is nothing more certain than the general truth that it is the
grievous <i>sin of the world</i> which has produced the grievous <i>suffering
of the world</i>. I am not referring here to the physical connection
between these two things lying in the realm of experience; my meaning is
metaphysical. Accordingly, the sole thing that reconciles me to the Old
Testament is the story of the Fall. In my eyes, it is the only
metaphysical truth in that book, even though it appears in the form of an
allegory. There seems to me no better explanation of our existence than
that it is the result of some false step, some sin of which we are paying
the penalty. I cannot refrain from recommending the thoughtful reader a
popular, but at the same time, profound treatise on this subject by
Claudius<SPAN href="#linknote-5" name="linknoteref-5" id="linknoteref-5">5</SPAN>
which exhibits the essentially pessimistic spirit of Christianity. It is
entitled: <i>Cursed is the ground for thy sake</i>.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-5" id="linknote-5"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
5 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-5">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ <i>Translator's Note</i>.—Matthias
Claudius (1740-1815), a popular poet, and friend of Klopstock, Herder and
Leasing. He edited the <i>Wandsbecker Bote</i>, in the fourth part of
which appeared the treatise mentioned above. He generally wrote under the
pseudonym of <i>Asmus</i>, and Schopenhauer often refers to him by this
name.]</p>
<p>Between the ethics of the Greeks and the ethics of the Hindoos, there is a
glaring contrast. In the one case (with the exception, it must be
confessed, of Plato), the object of ethics is to enable a man to lead a
happy life; in the other, it is to free and redeem him from life
altogether—as is directly stated in the very first words of the <i>Sankhya
Karika</i>.</p>
<p>Allied with this is the contrast between the Greek and the Christian idea
of death. It is strikingly presented in a visible form on a fine antique
sarcophagus in the gallery of Florence, which exhibits, in relief, the
whole series of ceremonies attending a wedding in ancient times, from the
formal offer to the evening when Hymen's torch lights the happy couple
home. Compare with that the Christian coffin, draped in mournful black and
surmounted with a crucifix! How much significance there is in these two
ways of finding comfort in death. They are opposed to each other, but each
is right. The one points to the <i>affirmation</i> of the will to live,
which remains sure of life for all time, however rapidly its forms may
change. The other, in the symbol of suffering and death, points to the <i>denial</i>
of the will to live, to redemption from this world, the domain of death
and devil. And in the question between the affirmation and the denial of
the will to live, Christianity is in the last resort right.</p>
<p>The contrast which the New Testament presents when compared with the Old,
according to the ecclesiastical view of the matter, is just that existing
between my ethical system and the moral philosophy of Europe. The Old
Testament represents man as under the dominion of Law, in which, however,
there is no redemption. The New Testament declares Law to have failed,
frees man from its dominion,<SPAN href="#linknote-6" name="linknoteref-6" id="linknoteref-6">6</SPAN> and in its stead preaches the kingdom of grace,
to be won by faith, love of neighbor and entire sacrifice of self. This is
the path of redemption from the evil of the world. The spirit of the New
Testament is undoubtedly asceticism, however your protestants and
rationalists may twist it to suit their purpose. Asceticism is the denial
of the will to live; and the transition from the Old Testament to the New,
from the dominion of Law to that of Faith, from justification by works to
redemption through the Mediator, from the domain of sin and death to
eternal life in Christ, means, when taken in its real sense, the
transition from the merely moral virtues to the denial of the will to
live. My philosophy shows the metaphysical foundation of justice and the
love of mankind, and points to the goal to which these virtues necessarily
lead, if they are practised in perfection. At the same time it is candid
in confessing that a man must turn his back upon the world, and that the
denial of the will to live is the way of redemption. It is therefore
really at one with the spirit of the New Testament, whilst all other
systems are couched in the spirit of the Old; that is to say,
theoretically as well as practically, their result is Judaism—mere
despotic theism. In this sense, then, my doctrine might be called the only
true Christian philosophy—however paradoxical a statement this may
seem to people who take superficial views instead of penetrating to the
heart of the matter.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-6" id="linknote-6"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
6 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-6">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Cf. Romans vii; Galatians
ii, iii.]</p>
<p>If you want a safe compass to guide you through life, and to banish all
doubt as to the right way of looking at it, you cannot do better than
accustom yourself to regard this world as a penitentiary, a sort of a
penal colony, or [Greek: ergastaerion] as the earliest philosopher called
it.<SPAN href="#linknote-7" name="linknoteref-7" id="linknoteref-7">7</SPAN>
Amongst the Christian Fathers, Origen, with praiseworthy courage, took
this view,<SPAN href="#linknote-8" name="linknoteref-8" id="linknoteref-8">8</SPAN>
which is further justified by certain objective theories of life. I refer,
not to my own philosophy alone, but to the wisdom of all ages, as
expressed in Brahmanism and Buddhism, and in the sayings of Greek
philosophers like Empedocles and Pythagoras; as also by Cicero, in his
remark that the wise men of old used to teach that we come into this world
to pay the penalty of crime committed in another state of existence—a
doctrine which formed part of the initiation into the mysteries.<SPAN href="#linknote-9" name="linknoteref-9" id="linknoteref-9">9</SPAN> And
Vanini—whom his contemporaries burned, finding that an easier task
than to confute him—puts the same thing in a very forcible way. <i>Man</i>,
he says, <i>is so full of every kind of misery that, were it not repugnant
to the Christian religion, I should venture to affirm that if evil spirits
exist at all, they have posed into human form and are now atoning for
their crimes</i>.<SPAN href="#linknote-10" name="linknoteref-10" id="linknoteref-10">10</SPAN> And true Christianity—using the word in
its right sense—also regards our existence as the consequence of sin
and error.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-7" id="linknote-7"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
7 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-7">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Cf. Clem. Alex. Strom. L.
iii, c, 3, p. 399.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-8" id="linknote-8"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
8 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-8">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Augustine <i>de cìvitate
Dei</i>., L. xi. c. 23.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-9" id="linknote-9"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
9 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-9">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ Cf. <i>Fragmenta de
philosophia</i>.]</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-10" id="linknote-10"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
10 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-10">return</SPAN>)<br/> [<i>De admirandis naturae
arcanis</i>; dial L. p. 35.]</p>
<p>If you accustom yourself to this view of life you will regulate your
expectations accordingly, and cease to look upon all its disagreeable
incidents, great and small, its sufferings, its worries, its misery, as
anything unusual or irregular; nay, you will find that everything is as it
should be, in a world where each of us pays the penalty of existence in
his own peculiar way. Amongst the evils of a penal colony is the society
of those who form it; and if the reader is worthy of better company, he
will need no words from me to remind him of what he has to put up with at
present. If he has a soul above the common, or if he is a man of genius,
he will occasionally feel like some noble prisoner of state, condemned to
work in the galleys with common criminals; and he will follow his example
and try to isolate himself.</p>
<p>In general, however, it should be said that this view of life will enable
us to contemplate the so-called imperfections of the great majority of
men, their moral and intellectual deficiencies and the resulting base type
of countenance, without any surprise, to say nothing of indignation; for
we shall never cease to reflect where we are, and that the men about us
are beings conceived and born in sin, and living to atone for it. That is
what Christianity means in speaking of the sinful nature of man.</p>
<p><i>Pardon's the word to all</i>! <SPAN href="#linknote-11"
name="linknoteref-11" id="linknoteref-11">11</SPAN> Whatever folly men
commit, be their shortcomings or their vices what they may, let us
exercise forbearance; remembering that when these faults appear in others,
it is our follies and vices that we behold. They are the shortcomings of
humanity, to which we belong; whose faults, one and all, we share; yes,
even those very faults at which we now wax so indignant, merely because
they have not yet appeared in ourselves. They are faults that do not lie
on the surface. But they exist down there in the depths of our nature; and
should anything call them forth, they will come and show themselves, just
as we now see them in others. One man, it is true, may have faults that
are absent in his fellow; and it is undeniable that the sum total of bad
qualities is in some cases very large; for the difference of individuality
between man and man passes all measure.</p>
<p><SPAN name="linknote-11" id="linknote-11"> </SPAN></p>
<p class="foot">
11 (<SPAN href="#linknoteref-11">return</SPAN>)<br/> [ "Cymbeline," Act v. Sc.
5.]</p>
<p>In fact, the conviction that the world and man is something that had
better not have been, is of a kind to fill us with indulgence towards one
another. Nay, from this point of view, we might well consider the proper
form of address to be, not <i>Monsieur, Sir, mein Herr</i>, but <i>my
fellow-sufferer, Socî malorum, compagnon de miseres</i>! This may perhaps
sound strange, but it is in keeping with the facts; it puts others in a
right light; and it reminds us of that which is after all the most
necessary thing in life—the tolerance, patience, regard, and love of
neighbor, of which everyone stands in need, and which, therefore, every
man owes to his fellow.</p>
<p><br/><br/></p>
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