第 10 节
作者:乐乐陶陶      更新:2021-08-28 17:12      字数:9322
  their capacity to invent the most lingering deaths。  They will have their
  enemies despatched; but not so fast that they may not have leisure to
  taste their vengeance。  And therein they are mightily perplexed; for if
  the torments they inflict are violent; they are short; if long; they are
  not then so painful as they desire; and thus plague themselves in choice
  of the greatest cruelty。  Of this we have a thousand examples in
  antiquity; and I know not whether we; unawares; do not retain some traces
  of this barbarity。
  All that exceeds a simple death appears to me absolute cruelty。  Our
  justice cannot expect that he; whom the fear of dying by being beheaded
  or hanged will not restrain; should be any more awed by the imagination
  of a languishing fire; pincers; or the wheel。  And I know not; in the
  meantime; whether we do not throw them into despair; for in what
  condition can be the soul of a man; expecting four…and…twenty hours
  together to be broken upon a wheel; or after the old way; nailed to a
  cross?  Josephus relates that in the time of the war the Romans made in
  Judaea; happening to pass by where they had three days before crucified
  certain Jews; he amongst them knew three of his own friends; and obtained
  the favour of having them taken down; of whom two; he says; died; the
  third lived a great while after。
  Chalcondylas; a writer of good credit; in the records he has left behind
  him of things that happened in his time; and near him; tells us; as of
  the most excessive torment; of that the Emperor Mohammed very often
  practised; of cutting off men in the middle by the diaphragm with one
  blow of a scimitar; whence it followed that they died as it were two
  deaths at once; and both the one part; says he; and the other; were seen
  to stir and strive a great while after in very great torment。  I do not
  think there was any great suffering in this motion the torments that are
  the most dreadful to look on are not always the greatest to endure; and I
  find those that other historians relate to have been practised by him
  upon the Epirot lords; are more horrid and cruel; where they were
  condemned to be flayed alive piecemeal; after so malicious a manner that
  they continued fifteen days in that misery。
  And these other two: Croesus; having caused a gentleman; the favourite of
  his brother Pantaleon; to be seized; carried him into a fuller's shop;
  where he caused him to be scratched and carded with the cards and combs
  belonging to that trade; till he died。  George Sechel; chief commander of
  the peasants of Poland; who committed so many mischiefs under the title
  of the Crusade; being defeated in battle and taken bu the Vayvode of
  Transylvania; was three days bound naked upon the rack exposed to all
  sorts of torments that any one could contrive against him: during which
  time many other prisoners were kept fasting; in the end; he living and
  looking on; they made his beloved brother Lucat; for whom alone he
  entreated; taking on himself the blame of all their evil actions drink
  his blood; and caused twenty of his most favoured captains to feed upon
  him; tearing his flesh in pieces with their teeth; and swallowing the
  morsels。  The remainder of his body and his bowels; so soon as he was
  dead; were boiled; and others of his followers compelled to eat them。
  CHAPTER XXVIII
  ALL THINGS HAVE THEIR SEASON
  Such as compare Cato the Censor with the younger Cato; who killed
  himself; compare two beautiful natures; much resembling one another。
  The first acquired his reputation several ways; and excels in military
  exploits and the utility of his public employments; but the virtue of the
  younger; besides that it were blasphemy to compare any to it in vigour;
  was much more pure and unblemished。  For who could absolve that of the
  Censor from envy and ambition; having dared to attack the honour of
  Scipio; a man in goodness and all other excellent qualities infinitely
  beyond him or any other of his time?
  That which they; report of him; amongst other things; that in his extreme
  old age he put himself upon learning the Greek tongue with so greedy an
  appetite; as if to quench a long thirst; does not seem to me to make much
  for his honour; it being properly what we call falling into second
  childhood。  All things have their seasons; even good ones; and I may say
  my Paternoster out of time; as they accused T。 Quintus Flaminius; that
  being general of an army; he was seen praying apart in the time of a
  battle that he won。
  〃Imponit finem sapiens et rebus honestis。〃
  '〃The wise man limits even honest things。〃Juvenal; vi。 444'
  Eudemonidas; seeing Xenocrates when very old; still very intent upon his
  school lectures: 〃When will this man be wise;〃 said he; 〃if he is yet
  learning?〃  And Philopaemen; to those who extolled King Ptolemy for every
  day inuring his person to the exercise of arms: 〃It is not;〃 said he;
  〃commendable in a king of his age to exercise himself in these things; he
  ought now really to employ them。〃  The young are to make their
  preparations; the old to enjoy them; say the sages: and the greatest vice
  they observe in us is that our desires incessantly grow young again; we
  are always re…beginning to live。
  Our studies and desires should sometime be sensible of age; yet we have
  one foot in the grave and still our appetites and pursuits spring every
  day anew within us:
  〃Tu secanda marmora
  Locas sub ipsum funus; et; sepulcri
  Immemor; struis domos。〃
  '〃You against the time of death have marble cut for use; and;
  forgetful of the tomb; build houses。〃Horace; Od。; ii。 18; 17。'
  The longest of my designs is not of above a year's extent; I think of
  nothing now but ending; rid myself of all new hopes and enterprises; take
  my last leave of every place I depart from; and every day dispossess
  myself of what I have。
  〃Olim jam nec perit quicquam mihi; nec acquiritur。。。。
  plus superest viatici quam viae。〃
  '〃Henceforward I will neither lose; nor expect to get: I have more
  wherewith to defray my journey; than I have way to go。〃  (Or):
  〃Hitherto nothing of me has been lost or gained; more remains to pay
  the way than there is way。〃Seneca; Ep。; 77。  (The sense seems to
  be that so far he had met his expenses; but that for the future he
  was likely to have more than he required。)'
  〃Vixi; et; quem dederat cursum fortuna; peregi。〃
  '〃I have lived and finished the career Fortune placed before me。〃
  AEneid; iv。 653。'
  'Tis indeed the only comfort I find in my old age; that it mortifies in
  me several cares and desires wherewith my life has been disturbed; the
  care how the world goes; the care of riches; of grandeur; of knowledge;
  of health; of myself。  There are men who are learning to speak at a time
  when they should learn to be silent for ever。  A man may always study;
  but he must not always go to school what a contemptible thing is an old
  Abecedarian!'Seneca; Ep。 36'
  〃Diversos diversa juvant; non omnibus annis
  Omnia conveniunt。〃
  '〃Various things delight various men; all things are not
  for all ages。〃Gall。; Eleg。; i。 104。'
  If we must study; let us study what is suitable to our present condition;
  that we may answer as he did; who being asked to what end he studied in
  his decrepit age; 〃that I may go out better;〃 said he; 〃and at greater
  ease。〃  Such a study was that of the younger Cato; feeling his end
  approach; and which he met with in Plato's Discourse of the Eternity of
  the Soul: not; as we are to believe; that he was not long before
  furnished with all sorts of provision for such a departure; for of
  assurance; an established will and instruction; he had more than Plato
  had in all his writings; his knowledge and courage were in this respect
  above philosophy; he applied himself to this study; not for the service
  of his death; but; as a man whose sleeps were never disturbed in the
  importance of such a deliberation; he also; without choice or change;
  continued his studies with the other accustomary actions of his life。
  The night that he was denied the praetorship he spent in play; that
  wherein he was to die he spent in reading。  The loss either of life
  or of office was all one to him。
  CHAPTER XXIX
  OF VIRTUE
  I find by experience; that there is a good deal to be said betwixt the
  flights and emotions of the soul or a resolute and constant habit; and
  very well perceive that there is nothing we may not do; nay; even to the
  surpassing the Divinity itself; says a certain person; forasmuch as it is
  more to render a man's self impassible by his own study and industry;
  than to be so by his natural condition; and even to be able to conjoin to
  man's imbecility and frailty a God…like resolution and assurance; but it
  is by fits and starts; and in the lives of those heroes of times past
  there are sometimes miraculous impulses; and that seem infinitely to
  exceed our natural force; but they are indeed only impulses: and 'tis
  hard to believe; that these so elevated qualities in a man can so
  thoroughly tinct and imbue the soul that they shou