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        <DC.Title>The Existence of God</DC.Title>
        <DC.Creator scheme="short-form" sub="Author">Francois Fenelon</DC.Creator>
        <DC.Creator scheme="file-as" sub="Author">Fenelon, Francois (1651-11715)</DC.Creator>
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    <div1 id="i" next="ii" prev="toc" title="Title Page">
<h1 id="i-p0.1">THE EXISTENCE OF GOD</h1>

<h4 id="i-p0.2">by</h4>

<h3 id="i-p0.3">François Fenelon</h3>
</div1>

    <div1 id="ii" next="iii" prev="i" title="Introduction">
<h2 id="ii-p0.1">INTRODUCTION</h2>
<p id="ii-p1" shownumber="no">An ancestor of the French divine who under the name of Fénelon
has made for himself a household name in England as in France, was Bertrand
de Salignac, Marquis de la Mothe Fénelon, who in 1572, as ambassador
for France, was charged to soften as much as he could the resentment
of our Queen Elizabeth when news came of the massacre of St. Bartholomew. 
Our Fénelon, claimed in brotherhood by Christians of every denomination,
was born nearly eighty years after that time, at the château of
Fénelon in Perigord, on the 6th of August, 1651.  To the
world he is Fénelon; he was François de Salignac de la
Mothe Fénelon to the France of his own time.</p>
<p id="ii-p2" shownumber="no">Fénelon was taught at home until the age of twelve, then sent
to the University of Cahors, where he began studies that were continued
at Paris in the Collège du Plessis.  There he fastened upon
theology, and there he preached, at the age of fifteen, his first sermon. 
He entered next into the seminary of Saint Sulpice, where he took holy
orders in the year 1675, at the age of twenty-four.  As a priest,
while true to his own Church, he fastened on Faith, Hope, and Charity
as the abiding forces of religion, and for him also the greatest of
these was Charity.</p>
<p id="ii-p3" shownumber="no">During the next three years of his life Fénelon was among
the young priests who preached and catechised in the church of St. Sulpice
and laboured in the parish.  He wrote for St. Sulpice Litanies
of the Infant Jesus, and had thought of going out as missionary to the
Levant.  The Archbishop of Paris, however, placed him at the head
of a community of “New Catholics,” whose function was to
confirm new converts in their faith, and help to bring into the fold
those who appeared willing to enter.  Fénelon took part
also in some of the Conferences on Scripture that were held at Saint
Germain and Versailles between 1672 and 1685.  In 1681 an uncle,
who was Bishop of Sarlat, resigned in Fénelon’s favour
the Deanery of Carenas, which produced an annual income of three or
four thousand livres.  It was while he held this office that Fénelon
published a book on the “Education of Girls,” at the request
of the Duchess of Beauvilliers, who asked for guidance in the education
of her children.</p>
<p id="ii-p4" shownumber="no">Fénelon sought the friendship of Bossuet, who revised for
him his next book, a “Refutation of the System of Malebranche
concerning Nature and Grace.”  His next book, written just
before the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, opposed the lawfulness
of the ministrations of the Protestant clergy; and after the Edict,
Fénelon was, on the recommendation of Bossuet, placed at the
head of the Catholic mission to Poitou.  He brought to his work
of conversion or re-conversion Charity, and a spirit of concession that
brought on him the attacks of men unlike in temper.</p>
<p id="ii-p5" shownumber="no">When Louis XIV. placed his grandson, the young Duke of Burgundy,
under the care of the Duke of Beauvilliers, the Duke of Beauvilliers
chose Fénelon for teacher of the pupil who was heir presumptive
to the throne.  Fénelon’s “Fables” were
written as part of his educational work.  He wrote also for the
young Duke of Burgundy his “Télémaque”—used
only in MS.—and his “Dialogues of the Dead.” 
While thus living in high favour at Court, Fénelon sought nothing
for himself or his friends, although at times he was even in want of
money.  In 1693—as preceptor of a royal prince rather than
as author—Fénelon was received into the French Academy. 
In 1694 Fénelon was made Abbot of Saint-Valery, and at the end
of that year he wrote an anonymous letter to Louis XIV. upon wrongful
wars and other faults committed in his reign.  A copy of it has
been found in Fénelon’s handwriting.  The king may
not have read it, or may not have identified the author, who was not
stayed by it from promotion in February of the next year (1695) to the
Archbishopric of Cambray.  He objected that the holding of this
office was inconsistent with his duties as preceptor of the King’s
grandchildren.  Louis replied that he could live at Court only
for three months in the year, and during the other nine direct the studies
of his pupils from Cambray.</p>
<p id="ii-p6" shownumber="no">Bossuet took part in the consecration of his friend Fénelon
as Archbishop of Cambray; but after a time division of opinion arose. 
Jeanne Marie Bouvier de la Mothe Guyon became in 1676 a widow at the
age of twenty-eight, with three children, for whose maintenance she
gave up part of her fortune, and she then devoted herself to the practice
and the preaching of a spiritual separation of the soul from earthly
cares, and rest in God.  She said with Galahad, “If I lose
myself, I save myself.”  Her enthusiasm for a pure ideal,
joined to her eloquence, affected many minds.  It provoked opposition
in the Church and in the Court, which was for the most part gross and
self-seeking.  Madame Guyon was attacked, even imprisoned. 
Fénelon felt the charm of her spiritual aspiration, and, without
accepting its form, was her defender.  Bossuet attacked her views. 
Fénelon published “Maxims of the Saints on the Interior
Life.”  Bossuet wrote on “The States of Prayer.” 
These were the rival books in a controversy about what was called “Quietism.” 
Bossuet afterwards wrote a “Relation sur le Quietisme,”
of which Fénelon’s copy, charged with his own marginal
comments, is in the British Museum.  In March, 1699, the Pope finally
decided against Fénelon, and condemned his “Maxims of the
Saints.”  Fénelon read from his pulpit the brief of
condemnation, accepted the decision of the Pope, and presented to his
church a piece of gold plate, on which the Angel of Truth was represented
trampling many errors under foot, and among them his own “Maxims
of the Saints.”  At Court, Fénelon was out of favour. 
“Télémaque,” written for the young Duke of
Burgundy, had not been published; but a copy having been obtained through
a servant, it was printed, and its ideal of a true king and a true Court
was so unlike his Majesty Louis XIV. and the Court of France, and the
image of what ought not to be was so like what was, that it was resented
as a libel.  “Télémaque” was publicly
condemned; Fénelon was banished from Court, and restrained within
the limits of his diocese.  Though separated from his pupil, the
young Duke of Burgundy (who died in 1712), Fénelon retained his
pupil’s warm affection.  The last years of his own life Fénelon
gave to his work in Cambray, until his death on the 7th of January,
1715.  He wrote many works, of which this is one, and they have
been collected into twenty volumes.  The translation here given
was anonymous, and was first published in the year 1713.</p>
<p id="ii-p7" shownumber="no">H. M.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="iii" next="iv" prev="ii" title="SECT. I. Metaphysical Proofs of the Existence of God are not within Everybody's Reach">

<h2 id="iii-p0.1">The Existence of God</h2>
<h3 id="iii-p0.2">SECTION I.  Metaphysical Proofs of the Existence of God are
not within Everybody’s reach.</h3>

<p id="iii-p1" shownumber="no">I cannot open my eyes without admiring the art that shines throughout
all nature; the least cast suffices to make me perceive the Hand that
makes everything.</p>
<p id="iii-p2" shownumber="no">Men accustomed to meditate upon metaphysical truths, and to trace
up things to their first principles, may know the Deity by its idea;
and I own that is a sure way to arrive at the source of all truth. 
But the more direct and short that way is, the more difficult and unpassable
it is for the generality of mankind who depend on their senses and imagination.</p>
<p id="iii-p3" shownumber="no">An ideal demonstration is so simple, that through its very simplicity
it escapes those minds that are incapable of operations purely intellectual. 
In short, the more perfect is the way to find the First Being, the fewer
men there are that are capable to follow it.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="iv" next="v" prev="iii" title="SECT. II. Moral Proofs of the Existence of God are fitted to every man’s capacity."> 
<h3 id="iv-p0.1">SECT.  II.  Moral Proofs of the Existence of God are fitted
to every man’s capacity.</h3>

<p id="iv-p1" shownumber="no">But there is a less perfect way, level to the meanest capacity. 
Men the least exercised in reasoning, and the most tenacious of the
prejudices of the senses, may yet with one look discover Him who has
drawn Himself in all His works.  The wisdom and power He has stamped
upon everything He has made are seen, as it were, in a glass by those
that cannot contemplate Him in His own idea.  This is a sensible
and popular philosophy, of which any man free from passion and prejudice
is capable.  <span class="ital" id="iv-p1.1">Humana autem anima rationalis est, quæ mortalibus
peccati pœna tenebatur, ad hoc diminutionis redacta ut per conjecturas
rerum visibilium ad intelligenda invisibilia niteretur</span>; that is,
“The human soul is still rational, but in such a manner that,
being by the punishment of sin detained in the bonds of death, it is
so far reduced that it can only endeavour to arrive at the knowledge
of things invisible through the visible.”</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="v" next="vi" prev="iv" title="SECT. III. Why so few Persons are attentive to the Proofs Nature affords of the Existence of God.">
<h3 id="v-p0.1">SECT.  III.  Why so few Persons are attentive to the Proofs
Nature affords of the Existence of God.</h3>

<p id="v-p1" shownumber="no">If a great number of men of subtle and penetrating wit have not discovered
God with one cast of the eye upon nature, it is not matter of wonder;
for either the passions they have been tossed by have still rendered
them incapable of any fixed reflection, or the false prejudices that
result from passions have, like a thick cloud, interposed between their
eyes and that noble spectacle.  A man deeply concerned in an affair
of great importance, that should take up all the attention of his mind,
might pass several days in a room treating about his concerns without
taking notice of the proportions of the chamber, the ornaments of the
chimney, and the pictures about him, all which objects would continually
be before his eyes, and yet none of them make any impression upon him. 
In this manner it is that men spend their lives; everything offers God
to their sight, and yet they see it nowhere.  “He was in
the world, and the world was made by Him, and nevertheless the world
did not know Him”—<span class="ital" id="v-p1.1">In mundo erat</span>, <span class="ital" id="v-p1.2">et mundus per
ipsum factus est</span>, <span class="ital" id="v-p1.3">et mundus eum non cognovit</span>.  They
pass away their lives without perceiving that sensible representation
of the Deity.  Such is the fascination of worldly trifles that
obscures their eyes!  <span class="ital" id="v-p1.4">Fascinatio nugacitatis obscurat bona</span>. 
Nay, oftentimes they will not so much as open them, but rather affect
to keep them shut, lest they should find Him they do not look for. 
In short, what ought to help most to open their eyes serves only to
close them faster; I mean the constant duration and regularity of the
motions which the Supreme Wisdom has put in the universe.  St.
Austin tells us those great wonders have been debased by being constantly
renewed; and Tully speaks exactly in the same manner.  “By
seeing every day the same things, the mind grows familiar with them
as well as the eyes.  It neither admires nor inquires into the
causes of effects that are ever seen to happen in the same manner, as
if it were the novelty, and not the importance of the thing itself,
that should excite us to such an inquiry.”  <span class="ital" id="v-p1.5">Sed assiduitate
quotidiana et consuetudine oculorum assuescunt animi</span>, <span class="ital" id="v-p1.6">neque admirantur
neque requirunt rationes earum rerum</span>, <span class="ital" id="v-p1.7">quas semper vident</span>,
<span class="ital" id="v-p1.8">perinde quasi novit as nos magis quam magnitudo rerum debeat ad exquirendas
causas excitare.</span></p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="vi" next="vii" prev="v" title="SECT. IV. All Nature shows the Existence of its Maker.">
<h3 id="vi-p0.1">SECT.  IV.  All Nature shows the Existence of its Maker.</h3>

<p id="vi-p1" shownumber="no">But, after all, whole nature shows the infinite art of its Maker. 
When I speak of an art, I mean a collection of proper means chosen on
purpose to arrive at a certain end; or, if you please, it is an order,
a method, an industry, or a set design.  Chance, on the contrary,
is a blind and necessary cause, which neither sets in order nor chooses
anything, and which has neither will nor understanding.  Now I
maintain that the universe bears the character and stamp of a cause
infinitely powerful and industrious; and, at the same time, that chance
(that is, the blind and fortuitous concourse of causes necessary and
void of reason) cannot have formed this universe.  To this purpose
it is not amiss to call to mind the celebrated comparisons of the ancients.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="vii" next="viii" prev="vi" title="SECT. V. Noble Comparisons proving that Nature shows the Existence of its Maker. First Comparison, drawn from Homer’s “Iliad.”">
<h3 id="vii-p0.1">SECT.  V.  Noble Comparisons proving that Nature shows
the Existence of its Maker.  First Comparison, drawn from Homer’s
“Iliad.”</h3>

<p id="vii-p1" shownumber="no">Who will believe that so perfect a poem as Homer’s “Iliad”
was not the product of the genius of a great poet, and that the letters
of the alphabet, being confusedly jumbled and mixed, were by chance,
as it were by the cast of a pair of dice, brought together in such an
order as is necessary to describe, in verses full of harmony and variety,
so many great events; to place and connect them so well together; to
paint every object with all its most graceful, most noble, and most
affecting attendants; in short, to make every person speak according
to his character in so natural and so forcible a manner?  Let people
argue and subtilise upon the matter as much as they please, yet they
never will persuade a man of sense that the “Iliad” was
the mere result of chance.  Cicero said the same in relation to
Ennius’s “Annals;” adding that chance could never
make one single verse, much less a whole poem.  How then can a
man of sense be induced to believe, with respect to the universe, a
work beyond contradiction more wonderful than the “Iliad,”
what his reason will never suffer him to believe in relation to that
poem?  Let us attend another comparison, which we owe to St. Gregory
Nazianzenus.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="viii" next="ix" prev="vii" title="SECT. VI. Second Comparison, drawn from the Sound of Instruments.">
<h3 id="viii-p0.1">SECT.  VI.  Second Comparison, drawn from the Sound of
Instruments.</h3>

<p id="viii-p1" shownumber="no">If we heard in a room, from behind a curtain, a soft and harmonious
instrument, should we believe that chance, without the help of any human
hand, could have formed such an instrument?  Should we say that
the strings of a violin, for instance, had of their own accord ranged
and extended themselves on a wooden frame, whose several parts had glued
themselves together to form a cavity with regular apertures?  Should
we maintain that the bow formed without art should be pushed by the
wind to touch every string so variously, and with such nice justness? 
What rational man could seriously entertain a doubt whether a human
hand touched such an instrument with so much harmony?  Would he
not cry out, “It is a masterly hand that plays upon it?” 
Let us proceed to inculcate the same truth.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="ix" next="x" prev="viii" title="SECT. VII. Third Comparison, drawn from a Statue.">
<h3 id="ix-p0.1">SECT.  VII.  Third Comparison, drawn from a Statue.</h3>

<p id="ix-p1" shownumber="no">If a man should find in a desert island a fine statue of marble,
he would undoubtedly immediately say, “Sure, there have been men
here formerly; I perceive the workmanship of a skilful statuary; I admire
with what niceness he has proportioned all the limbs of this body, in
order to give them so much beauty, gracefulness, majesty, life, tenderness,
motion, and action!”</p>
<p id="ix-p2" shownumber="no">What would such a man answer if anybody should tell him, “That’s
your mistake; a statuary never carved that figure.  It is made,
I confess, with an excellent gusto, and according to the rules of perfection;
but yet it is chance alone made it.  Among so many pieces of marble
there was one that formed itself of its own accord in this manner; the
rains and winds have loosened it from the mountains; a violent storm
has thrown it plumb upright on this pedestal, which had prepared itself
to support it in this place.  It is a perfect Apollo, like that
of Belvedere; a Venus that equals that of the Medicis; an Hercules,
like that of Farnese.  You would think, it is true, that this figure
walks, lives, thinks, and is just going to speak.  But, however,
it is not in the least beholden to art; and it is only a blind stroke
of chance that has thus so well finished and placed it.”</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="x" next="xi" prev="ix" title="SECT.  VIII.  Fourth Comparison, drawn from a Picture.">
<h3 id="x-p0.1">SECT.  VIII.  Fourth Comparison, drawn from a Picture.</h3>

<p id="x-p1" shownumber="no">If a man had before his eyes a fine picture, representing, for example,
the passage of the Red Sea, with Moses, at whose voice the waters divide
themselves, and rise like two walls to let the Israelites pass dryfoot
through the deep, he would see, on the one side, that innumerable multitude
of people, full of confidence and joy, lifting up their hands to heaven;
and perceive, on the other side, King Pharaoh with the Egyptians frighted
and confounded at the sight of the waves that join again to swallow
them up.  Now, in good earnest, who would be so bold as to affirm
that a chambermaid, having by chance daubed that piece of cloth, the
colours had of their own accord ranged themselves in order to produce
that lively colouring, those various attitudes, those looks so well
expressing different passions, that elegant disposition of so many figures
without confusion, that decent plaiting of draperies, that management
of lights, that degradation of colours, that exact perspective—in
short, all that the noblest genius of a painter can invent?  If
there were no more in the case than a little foam at the mouth of a
horse, I own, as the story goes, and which I readily allow without examining
into it, that a stroke of a pencil thrown in a pet by a painter might
once in many ages happen to express it well.  But, at least, the
painter must beforehand have, with design, chosen the most proper colours
to represent that foam, in order to prepare them at the end of his pencil;
and, therefore, it were only a little chance that had finished what
art had begun.  Besides, this work of art and chance together being
only a little foam, a confused object, and so most proper to credit
a stroke of chance—an object without form, that requires only
a little whitish colour dropped from a pencil, without any exact figure
or correction of design.  What comparison is there between that
foam with a whole design of a large continued history, in which the
most fertile fancy and the boldest genius, supported by the perfect
knowledge of rules, are scarce sufficient to perform what makes an excellent
picture?  I cannot prevail with myself to leave these instances
without desiring the reader to observe that the most rational men are
naturally extreme loath to think that beasts have no manner of understanding,
and are mere machines.  Now, whence proceeds such an invincible
averseness to that opinion in so many men of sense?  It is because
they suppose, with reason, that motions so exact, and according to the
rules of perfect mechanism, cannot be made without some industry; and
that artless matter alone cannot perform what argues so much knowledge. 
Hence it appears that sound reason naturally concludes that matter alone
cannot, either by the simple laws of motion, or by the capricious strokes
of chance, make even animals that are mere machines.  Those philosophers
themselves, who will not allow beasts to have any reasoning faculty,
cannot avoid acknowledging that what they suppose to be blind and artless
in these machines is yet full of wisdom and art in the First Mover,
who made their springs and regulated their movements.  Thus the
most opposite philosophers perfectly agree in acknowledging that matter
and chance cannot, without the help of art, produce all we observe in
animals.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xi" next="xii" prev="x" title="SECT.  IX.  A Particular Examination of Nature.">
<h3 id="xi-p0.1">SECT.  IX.  A Particular Examination of Nature.</h3>

<p id="xi-p1" shownumber="no">After these comparisons, about which I only desire the reader to
consult himself, without any argumentation, I think it is high time
to enter into a detail of Nature.  I do not pretend to penetrate
through the whole; who is able to do it?  Neither do I pretend
to enter into any physical discussion.  Such way of reasoning requires
a certain deep knowledge, which abundance of men of wit and sense never
acquired; and, therefore, I will offer nothing to them but the simple
prospect of the face of Nature.  I will entertain them with nothing
but what everybody knows, and which requires only a little calm and
serious attention.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xii" next="xiii" prev="xi" title="SECT.  X.  Of the General Structure of the Universe.">
<h3 id="xii-p0.1">SECT.  X.  Of the General Structure of the Universe.</h3>

<p id="xii-p1" shownumber="no">Let us, in the first place, stop at the great object that first strikes
our sight, I mean the general structure of the universe.  Let us
cast our eyes on this earth that bears us.  Let us look on that
vast arch of the skies that covers us; those immense regions of air,
and depths of water that surround us; and those bright stars that light
us.  A man who lives without reflecting thinks only on the parts
of matter that are near him, or have any relation to his wants. 
He only looks upon the earth as on the floor of his chamber, and on
the sun that lights him in the daytime as on the candle that lights
him in the night.  His thoughts are confined within the place he
inhabits.  On the contrary, a man who is used to contemplate and
reflect carries his looks further, and curiously considers the almost
infinite abysses that surround him on all sides.  A large kingdom
appears then to him but a little corner of the earth; the earth itself
is no more to his eyes than a point in the mass of the universe; and
he admires to see himself placed in it, without knowing which way he
came there.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xiii" next="xiv" prev="xii" title="SECT.  XI.  Of the Earth.">
<h3 id="xiii-p0.1">SECT.  XI.  Of the Earth.</h3>

<p id="xiii-p1" shownumber="no">Who is it that hung and poised this motionless globe of the earth? 
Who laid its foundation?  Nothing seems more vile and contemptible;
for the meanest wretches tread it under foot; but yet it is in order
to possess it that we part with the greatest treasures.  If it
were harder than it is, man could not open its bosom to cultivate it;
and if it were less hard it could not bear them, and they would sink
everywhere as they do in sand, or in a bog.  It is from the inexhaustible
bosom of the earth we draw what is most precious.  That shapeless,
vile, and rude mass assumes the most various forms; and yields alone,
by turns, all the goods we can desire.  That dirty soil transforms
itself into a thousand fine objects that charm the eye.  In the
compass of one year it turns into branches, twigs, buds, leaves, blossoms,
fruits, and seeds, in order, by those various shapes, to multiply its
liberalities to mankind.  Nothing exhausts the earth; the more
we tear her bowels the more she is liberal.  After so many ages,
during which she has produced everything, she is not yet worn out. 
She feels no decay from old age, and her entrails still contain the
same treasures.  A thousand generations have passed away, and returned
into her bosom.  Everything grows old, she alone excepted: for
she grows young again every year in the spring.  She is never wanting
to men; but foolish men are wanting to themselves in neglecting to cultivate
her.  It is through their laziness and extravagance they suffer
brambles and briars to grow instead of grapes and corn.  They contend
for a good they let perish.  The conquerors leave uncultivated
the ground for the possession of which they have sacrificed the lives
of so many thousand men, and have spent their own in hurry and trouble. 
Men have before them vast tracts of land uninhabited and uncultivated;
and they turn mankind topsy-turvy for one nook of that neglected ground
in dispute.  The earth, if well cultivated, would feed a hundred
times more men than now she does.  Even the unevenness of ground
which at first seems to be a defect turns either into ornament or profit. 
The mountains arose and the valleys descended to the place the Lord
had appointed for them.  Those different grounds have their particular
advantages, according to the divers aspects of the sun.  In those
deep valleys grow fresh and tender grass to feed cattle.  Next
to them opens a vast champaign covered with a rich harvest.  Here,
hills rise like an amphitheatre, and are crowned with vineyards and
fruit trees.  There high mountains carry aloft their frozen brows
to the very clouds, and the torrents that run down from them become
the springs of rivers.  The rocks that show their craggy tops bear
up the earth of mountains just as the bones bear up the flesh in human
bodies.  That variety yields at once a ravishing prospect to the
eye, and, at the same time, supplies the divers wants of man. 
There is no ground so barren but has some profitable property. 
Not only black and fertile soil but even clay and gravel recompense
a man’s toil.  Drained morasses become fruitful; sand for
the most part only covers the surface of the earth; and when, the husbandman
has the patience to dig deeper he finds a new ground that grows fertile
as fast as it is turned and exposed to the rays of the sun.</p>
<p id="xiii-p2" shownumber="no">There is scarce any spot of ground absolutely barren if a man do
not grow weary of digging, and turning it to the enlivening sun, and
if he require no more from it than it is proper to bear, amidst stones
and rocks there is sometimes excellent pasture; and their cavities have
veins, which, being penetrated by the piercing rays of the sun, furnish
plants with most savoury juices for the feeding of herds and flocks. 
Even sea-coasts that seem to be the most sterile and wild yield sometimes
either delicious fruits or most wholesome medicines that are wanting
in the most fertile countries.  Besides, it is the effect of a
wise over-ruling providence that no land yields all that is useful to
human life.  For want invites men to commerce, in order to supply
one another’s necessities.  It is therefore that want that
is the natural tie of society between nations: otherwise all the people
of the earth would be reduced to one sort of food and clothing; and
nothing would invite them to know and visit one another.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xiv" next="xv" prev="xiii" title="SECT.  XII.  Of Plants.">
<h3 id="xiv-p0.1">SECT.  XII.  Of Plants.</h3>

<p id="xiv-p1" shownumber="no">All that the earth produces being corrupted, returns into her bosom,
and becomes the source of a new production.  Thus she resumes all
she has given in order to give it again.  Thus the corruption of
plants, and the excrements of the animals she feeds, feed her, and improve
her fertility.  Thus, the more she gives the more she resumes;
and she is never exhausted, provided they who cultivate her restore
to her what she has given.  Everything comes from her bosom, everything
returns to it, and nothing is lost in it.  Nay, all seeds multiply
there.  If, for instance, you trust the earth with some grains
of corn, as they corrupt they germinate and spring; and that teeming
parent restores with usury more ears than she had received grains. 
Dig into her entrails, you will find in them stone and marble for the
most magnificent buildings.  But who is it that has laid up so
many treasures in her bosom, upon condition that they should continually
produce themselves anew?  Behold how many precious and useful metals;
how many minerals designed for the conveniency of man!</p>
<p id="xiv-p2" shownumber="no">Admire the plants that spring from the earth: they yield food for
the healthy, and remedies for the sick.  Their species and virtues
are innumerable.  They deck the earth, yield verdure, fragrant
flowers, and delicious fruits.  Do you see those vast forests that
seem as old as the world?  Those trees sink into the earth by their
roots, as deep as their branches shoot up to the sky.  Their roots
defend them against the winds, and fetch up, as it were by subterranean
pipes, all the juices destined to feed the trunk.  The trunk itself
is covered with a tough bark that shelters the tender wood from the
injuries of the air.  The branches distribute by several pipes
the sap which the roots had gathered up in the trunk.  In summer
the boughs protect us with their shadow against the scorching rays of
the sun.  In winter, they feed the fire that preserves in us natural
heat.  Nor is burning the only use wood is fit for; it is a soft
though solid and durable matter, to which the hand of man gives, with
ease, all the forms he pleases for the greatest works of architecture
and navigation.  Moreover, fruit trees by bending their boughs
towards the earth seem to offer their crop to man.  The trees and
plants, by letting their fruit or seed drop down, provide for a numerous
posterity about them.  The tenderest plant, the least of herbs
and pulse are, in little, in a small seed, all that is displayed in
the highest plants and largest tree.  Earth that never changes
produces all those alterations in her bosom.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xv" next="xvi" prev="xiv" title="SECT.  XIII.  Of Water.">
<h3 id="xv-p0.1">SECT.  XIII.  Of Water.</h3>

<p id="xv-p1" shownumber="no">Let us now behold what we call water.  It is a liquid, clear,
and transparent body.  On the one hand it flows, slips, and runs
away; and on the other it assumes all the forms of the bodies that surround
it, having properly none of its own.  If water were more rarefied,
or thinner, it would be a kind of air; and so the whole surface of the
earth would be dry and sterile.  There would be none but volatiles;
no living creature could swim; no fish could live; nor would there be
any traffic by navigation.  What industrious and sagacious hand
has found means to thicken the water, by subtilising the air, and so
well to distinguish those two sorts of fluid bodies?  If water
were somewhat more rarefied, it could no longer sustain those prodigious
floating buildings, called ships.  Bodies that have the least ponderosity
would presently sink under water.  Who is it that took care to
frame so just a configuration of parts, and so exact a degree of motion,
as to make water so fluid, so penetrating, so slippery, so incapable
of any consistency: and yet so strong to bear, and so impetuous to carry
off and waft away, the most unwieldy bodies?  It is docile; man
leads it about as a rider does a well-managed horse.  He distributes
it as he pleases; he raises it to the top of steep mountains, and makes
use of its weight to let it fall, in order to rise again, as high as
it was at first.  But man who leads waters with such absolute command
is in his turn led by them.  Water is one of the greatest moving
powers that man can employ to supply his defects in the most necessary
arts, either through the smallness or weakness of his body.  But
the waters which, notwithstanding their fluidity, are such ponderous
bodies, do nevertheless rise above our heads, and remain a long while
hanging there.  Do you see those clouds that fly, as it were, on
the wings of the winds?  If they should fall, on a sudden, in watery
pillars, rapid like a torrent, they would drown and destroy everything
where they should happen to fall, and the other grounds would remain
dry.  What hand keeps them in those pendulous reservatories, and
permits them to fall only by drops as if they distilled through a gardener’s
watering-pot?  Whence comes it that in some hot countries, where
scarce any rain ever falls, the nightly dews are so plentiful that they
supply the want of rain; and that in other countries, such as the banks
of the Nile and Ganges, the regular inundation of rivers, at certain
seasons of the year, never fails to make up what the inhabitants are
deficient in for the watering of the ground?  Can one imagine measures
better concerted to render all countries fertile and fruitful?</p>
<p id="xv-p2" shownumber="no">Thus water quenches, not only the thirst of men, but likewise of
arid lands: and He who gave us that fluid body has carefully distributed
it throughout the earth, like pipes in a garden.  The waters fall
from the tops of mountains where their reservatories are placed. 
They gather into rivulets in the bottom of valleys.  Rivers run
in winding streams through vast tracts of land, the better to water
them; and, at last, they precipitate themselves into the sea, in order
to make it the centre of commerce for all nations.  That ocean,
which seems to be placed in the midst of lands, to make an eternal separation
between them, is, on the contrary, the common rendezvous of all the
people of the earth, who could not go by land from one end of the world
to the other without infinite fatigue, tedious journeys, and numberless
dangers.  It is by that trackless road, across the bottomless deep,
that the whole world shakes hands with the new; and that the new supplies
the old with so many conveniences and riches.  The waters, distributed
with so much art, circulate in the earth, just as the blood does in
a man’s body.  But besides this perpetual circulation of
the water, there is besides the flux and reflux of the sea.  Let
us not inquire into the causes of so mysterious an effect.  What
is certain is that the tide carries, or brings us back to certain places,
at precise hours.  Who is it that makes it withdraw, and then come
back with so much regularity?  A little more or less motion in
that fluid mass would disorder all nature; for a little more motion
in a tide or flood would drown whole kingdoms.  Who is it that
knew how to take such exact measures in immense bodies?  Who is
it that knew so well how to keep a just medium between too much and
too little?  What hand has set to the sea the unmovable boundary
it must respect through the series of all ages by telling it: There,
thy proud waves shall come and break?  But these waters so fluid
become, on a sudden, during the winter, as hard as rocks.  The
summits of high mountains have, even at all times, ice and snow, which
are the springs of rivers, and soaking pasture-grounds render them more
fertile.  Here waters are sweet to quench the thirst of man; there
they are briny, and yield a salt that seasons our meat, and makes it
incorruptible.  In fine, if I lift up my eyes, I perceive in the
clouds that fly above us a sort of hanging seas that serve to temper
the air, break the fiery rays of the sun, and water the earth when it
is too dry.  What hand was able to hang over our heads those great
reservatories of waters?  What hand takes care never to let them
fall but in moderate showers?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xvi" next="xvii" prev="xv" title="SECT.  XIV.  Of the Air.">
<h3 id="xvi-p0.1">SECT.  XIV.  Of the Air.</h3>

<p id="xvi-p1" shownumber="no">After having considered the waters, let us now contemplate another
mass yet of far greater extent.  Do you see what is called air? 
It is a body so pure, so subtle, and so transparent, that the rays of
the stars, seated at a distance almost infinite from us, pierce quite
through it, without difficulty, and in an instant, to light our eyes. 
Had this fluid body been a little less subtle, it would either have
intercepted the day from us, or at most would have left us but a duskish
and confused light, just as when the air is filled with thick fogs. 
We live plunged in abysses of air, as fishes do in abysses of water. 
As the water, if it were subtilised, would become a kind of air, which
would occasion the death of fishes, so the air would deprive us of breath
if it should become more humid and thicker.  In such a case we
should drown in the waves of that thickened air, just as a terrestrial
animal drowns in the sea.  Who is it that has so nicely purified
that air we breathe?  If it were thicker it would stifle us; and
if it were too subtle it would want that softness which continually
feeds the vitals of man.  We should be sensible everywhere of what
we experience on the top of the highest mountains, where the air is
so thin that it yields no sufficient moisture and nourishment for the
lungs.  But what invisible power raises and lays so suddenly the
storms of that great fluid body, of which those of the sea are only
consequences?  From what treasury come forth the winds that purify
the air, cool scorching heats, temper the sharpness of winter, and in
an instant change the whole face of heaven?  On the wings of those
winds the clouds fly from one end of the horizon to the other. 
It is known that certain winds blow in certain seas, at some stated
seasons.  They continue a fixed time, and others succeed them,
as it were on purpose, to render navigation both commodious and regular:
so that if men are but as patient, and as punctual as the winds, they
may, with ease, perform the longest voyages.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xvii" next="xviii" prev="xvi" title="SECT.  XV.  Of Fire.">
<h3 id="xvii-p0.1">SECT.  XV.  Of Fire.</h3>

<p id="xvii-p1" shownumber="no">Do you see that fire that seems kindled in the stars, and spreads
its light on all sides?  Do you see that flame which certain mountains
vomit up, and which the earth feeds with sulphur within its entrails? 
That same fire peaceably lurks in the veins of flints, and expects to
break out, till the collision of another body excites it to shock cities
and mountains.  Man has found the way to kindle it, and apply it
to all his uses, both to bend the hardest metals, and to feed with wood,
even in the most frozen climes, a flame that serves him instead of the
sun, when the sun removes from him.  That subtle flame glides and
penetrates into all seeds.  It is, as it were, the soul of all
living things; it consumes all that is impure, and renews what it has
purified.  Fire lends its force and activity to weak men. 
It blows up, on a sudden, buildings and rocks.  But have we a mind
to confine it to a more moderate use?  It warms man, and makes
all sorts of food fit for his eating.  The ancients, in admiration
of fire, believed it to be a celestial gift, which man had stolen from
the gods.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xviii" next="xix" prev="xvii" title="SECT.  XVI.  Of Heaven.">
<h3 id="xviii-p0.1">SECT.  XVI.  Of Heaven.</h3>

<p id="xviii-p1" shownumber="no">It is time to lift up our eyes to heaven.  What power has built
over our heads so vast and so magnificent an arch?  What a stupendous
variety of admirable objects is here?  It is, no doubt, to present
us with a noble spectacle that an Omnipotent Hand has set before our
eyes so great and so bright objects.  It is in order to raise our
admiration of heaven, says Tully, that God made man unlike the rest
of animals.  He stands upright, and lifts up his head, that he
may be employed about the things that were above him.  Sometimes
we see a duskish azure sky, where the purest fires twinkle.  Sometimes
we behold, in a temperate heaven, the softest colours mixed with such
variety as it is not in the power of painting to imitate.  Sometimes
we see clouds of all shapes and figures, and of all the brightest colours,
which every moment shift that beautiful decoration by the finest accidents
and various effects of light.  What does the regular succession
of day and night denote?  For so many ages as are past the sun
never failed serving men, who cannot live without it.  Many thousand
years are elapsed, and the dawn never once missed proclaiming the approach
of the day.  It always begins precisely at a certain moment and
place.  The sun, says the holy writ, knows where it shall set every
day.  By that means it lights, by turns, the two hemispheres, or
sides of the earth, and visits all those for whom its beams are designed. 
The day is the time for society and labour; the night, wrapping up the
earth with its shadow, ends, in its turn, all manner of fatigue and
alleviates the toil of the day.  It suspends and quiets all; and
spreads silence and sleep everywhere.  By refreshing the bodies
it renews the spirits.  Soon after day returns to summon again
man to labour and revive all nature.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xix" next="xx" prev="xviii" title="SECT.  XVII.  Of the Sun.">
<h3 id="xix-p0.1">SECT.  XVII.  Of the Sun.</h3>

<p id="xix-p1" shownumber="no">But besides the constant course by which the sun forms days and nights
it makes us sensible of another, by which for the space of six months
it approaches one of the poles, and at the end of those six months goes
back with equal speed to visit the other pole.  This excellent
order makes one sun sufficient for the whole earth.  If it were
of a larger size at the same distance, it would set the whole globe
on fire and the earth would be burnt to ashes; and if, at the same distance,
it were lesser, the earth would be all over frozen and uninhabitable. 
Again, if in the same magnitude it were nearer us, it would set us in
flames; and if more remote, we should not be able to live on the terrestrial
globe for want of heat.  What pair of compasses, whose circumference
encircles both heaven and earth, has fixed such just dimensions? 
That star does no less befriend that part of the earth from which it
removes, in order to temper it, than that it approaches to favour it
with its beams.  Its kind, beneficent aspect fertilises all it
shines upon.  This change produces that of the seasons, whose variety
is so agreeable.  The spring silences bleak frosty winds, brings
forth blossoms and flowers, and promises fruits.  The summer yields
rich harvests.  The autumn bestows the fruits promised by the spring. 
The winter, which is a kind of night wherein man refreshes and rests
himself, lays up all the treasures of the earth in its centre with no
other design but that the next spring may display them with all the
graces of novelty.  Thus nature, variously attired, yields so many
fine prospects that she never gives man leisure to be disgusted with
what he possesses.</p>
<p id="xix-p2" shownumber="no">But how is it possible for the course of the sun to be so regular? 
It appears that star is only a globe of most subtle flame.  Now,
what is it that keeps that flame, so restless and so impetuous, within
the exact bounds of a perfect globe?  What hand leads that flame
in so strait a way and never suffers it to slip one side or other? 
That flame is held by nothing, and there is no body that can either
guide it or keep it under; for it would soon consume whatever body it
should be enclosed in.  Whither is it going?  Who has taught
it incessantly and so regularly to turn in a space where it is free
and unconstrained?  Does it not circulate about us on purpose to
serve us?  Now if this flame does not turn, and if on the contrary
it is our earth that turns, I would fain know how it comes to be so
well placed in the centre of the universe, as it were the focus or the
heart of all nature.  I would fain know also how it comes to pass
that a globe of so subtle matter never slips on any side in that immense
space that surrounds it, and wherein it seems to stand with reason that
all fluid bodies ought to yield to the impetuosity of that flame.</p>
<p id="xix-p3" shownumber="no">In fine, I would fain know how it comes to pass that the globe of
the earth, which is so very hard, turns so regularly about that planet
in a space where no solid body keeps it fast to regulate its course. 
Let men with the help of physics contrive the most ingenious reasons
to explain this phenomenon; all their arguments, supposing them to be
true, will become proofs of the Deity.  The more the great spring
that directs the machine of the universe is exact, simple, constant,
certain, and productive of abundance of useful effects, the more it
is plain that a most potent and most artful hand knew how to pitch upon
the spring which is the most perfect of all.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xx" next="xxi" prev="xix" title="SECT.  XVIII.  Of the Stars.">
<h3 id="xx-p0.1">SECT.  XVIII.  Of the Stars.</h3>

<p id="xx-p1" shownumber="no">But let us once more view that immense arched roof where the stars
shine, and which covers our heads like a canopy.  If it be a solid
vault, what architect built it?  Who is it that has fixed so many
great luminous bodies to certain places of that arch and at certain
distances?  Who is it that makes that vault turn so regularly about
us?  If on the contrary the skies are only immense spaces full
of fluid bodies, like the air that surrounds us, how comes it to pass
that so many solid bodies float in them without ever sinking or ever
coming nearer one another?  For all astronomical observations that
have been made in so many ages not the least disorder or irregular motion
has yet been discovered in the heavens.  Will a fluid body range
in such constant and regular order bodies that swim circularly within
its sphere?  But what does that almost innumerable multitude of
stars mean?  The profusion with which the hand of God has scattered
them through His work shows nothing is difficult to His power. 
He has cast them about the skies as a magnificent prince either scatters
money by handfuls or studs his clothes with precious stones.  Let
who will say, if he pleases, that the stars are as many worlds like
the earth we inhabit; I grant it for one moment; but then, how potent
and wise must He be who makes worlds as numberless as the grains of
sand that cover the sea-shore, and who, without any trouble, for so
many ages governs all these wandering worlds as a shepherd does a flock
of sheep?  If on the contrary they are only, as it were, lighted
torches to shine in our eyes in this small globe called earth, how great
is that power which nothing can fatigue, nothing can exhaust? 
What a profuse liberality it is to give man in this little corner of
the universe so marvellous a spectacle!</p>
<p id="xx-p2" shownumber="no">But among those stars I perceive the moon, which seems to share with
the sun the care and office of lighting us.  She appears at set
times with all the other stars, when the sun is obliged to go and carry
back the day to the other hemisphere.  Thus night itself, notwithstanding
its darkness, has a light, duskish indeed, but soft and useful. 
That light is borrowed from the sun, though absent: and thus everything
is managed with such excellent art in the universe that a globe near
the earth, and as dark as she of itself, serves, nevertheless, to send
back to her, by reflection, the rays it receives from the sun; and that
the sun lights by means of the moon the people that cannot see him while
he must light others.</p>
<p id="xx-p3" shownumber="no">It may be said that the motion of the stars is settled and regulated
by unchangeable laws.  I suppose it is; but this very supposition
proves what I labour to evince.  Who is it that has given to all
nature laws at once so constant and so wholesome, laws so very simple,
that one is tempted to believe they establish themselves of their own
accord, and so productive of beneficial and useful effects that one
cannot avoid acknowledging a marvellous art in them?  Whence proceeds
the government of that universal machine which incessantly works for
us without so much as our thinking upon it?  To whom shall we ascribe
the choice and gathering of so many deep and so well conceited springs,
and of so many bodies, great and small, visible and invisible, which
equally concur to serve us?  The least atom of this machine that
should happen to be out of order would unhinge all nature.  For
the springs and movements of a watch are not put together with so much
art and niceness as those of the universe.  What then must be a
design so extensive, so coherent, so excellent, so beneficial? 
The necessity of those laws, instead of deterring me from inquiring
into their author, does but heighten my curiosity and admiration. 
Certainly, it required a hand equally artful and powerful to put in
His work an order equally simple and teeming, constant and useful. 
Wherefore I will not scruple to say with the Scripture, “Let every
star haste to go whither the Lord sends it; and when He speaks let them
answer with trembling, Here we are,” <span class="ital" id="xx-p3.1">Ecce adsumus.</span></p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxi" next="xxii" prev="xx" title="SECT.  XIX.  Of Animals, Beasts, Fowl, Birds, Fishes, Reptiles, and Insects.">
<h3 id="xxi-p0.1">SECT.  XIX.  Of Animals, Beasts, Fowl, Birds, Fishes,
Reptiles, and Insects.</h3>

<p id="xxi-p1" shownumber="no">But let us turn our eyes towards animals, which still are more worthy
of admiration than either the skies or stars.  Their species are
numberless.  Some have but two feet, others four, others again
a great many.  Some walk; others crawl, or creep; others fly; others
swim; others fly, walk, or swim, by turns.  The wings of birds,
and the fins of fishes, are like oars, that cut the waves either of
air or water, and steer the floating body either of the bird, or fish,
whose structure is like that of a ship.  But the pinions of birds
have feathers with a down, that swells in the air, and which would grow
unwieldy in the water.  And, on the contrary, the fins of fishes
have sharp and dry points, which cut the water, without imbibing it,
and which do not grow heavier by being wet.  A sort of fowl that
swim, such as swans, keep their wings and most of their feathers above
water, both lest they should wet them and that they may serve them,
as it were, for sails.  They have the art to turn those feathers
against the wind, and, in a manner, to tack, as ships do when the wind
does not serve.  Water-fowls, such as ducks, have at their feet
large skins that stretch, somewhat like rackets, to keep them from sinking
on the oozy and miry banks of rivers.</p>
<p id="xxi-p2" shownumber="no">Amongst the animals, wild beasts, such as lions, have their biggest
muscles about the shoulders, thighs, and legs; and therefore these animals
are nimble, brisk, nervous, and ready to rush forward.  Their jaw-bones
are prodigiously large, in proportion to the rest of their bodies. 
They have teeth and claws, which serve them, as terrible weapons, to
tear in pieces and devour other animals.  For the same reason,
birds of prey, such as eagles, have a beak and pounces that pierce everything. 
The muscles of their pinions are extreme large and brawny, that their
wings may have a stronger and more rapid motion: and so those creatures,
though somewhat heavy, soar aloft and tower up easily to the very clouds,
from whence they shoot, like a thunderbolt, on the quarry they have
in view.  Other animals have horns.  The greatest strength
of some lies in their backs and necks; and others can only kick. 
Every species, however, has both offensive and defensive arms. 
Their hunting is a kind of war, which they wage one against another,
for the necessities of life.  They have also laws and a government
among themselves.  Some, like tortoises, carry the house wherein
they were born; others build theirs, as birds do, on the highest branches
of trees, to preserve their young from the insult of unwinged creatures,
and they even lay their nests in the thickest boughs to hide them from
their enemies.  Another, such as the beaver, builds in the very
bottom of a pond the sanctuary he prepares for himself, and knows how
to cast up dikes around it, to preserve himself by the neighbouring
inundation.  Another, like a mole, has so pointed and so sharp
a snout, that in one moment he pierces through the hardest ground in
order to provide for himself a subterranean retreat.  The cunning
fox digs a kennel with two holes to go out and come in at, that he may
not be either surprised or trapped by the huntsmen.  The reptiles
are of another make.  They curl, wind, shrink, and stretch by the
springs of their muscles; they creep, twist about, squeeze, and hold
fast the bodies they meet in their way; and easily slide everywhere. 
Their organs are almost independent one on the other; so that they still
live when they are cut into two.  The long-legged birds, says Cicero,
are also long-necked in proportion, that they may bring down their bill
to the ground, and take up their food.  It is the same with the
camel; but the elephant, whose neck through its bigness would be too
heavy if it were as long as that of the camel, was furnished with a
trunk, which is a contexture of nerves and muscles, which he stretches,
shrinks, winds, and turns every way, to seize on bodies, lift them up,
or throw them off: for which reason the Latins called that trunk a hand.</p>
<p id="xxi-p3" shownumber="no">Certain animals seem to be made on purpose for man.  The dog
is born to caress and fawn upon him; to obey and be under command; to
give him an agreeable image of society, friendship, fidelity, and tenderness;
to be true to his trust; eagerly to hunt down, course, and catch several
other creatures, to leave them afterwards to man, without retaining
any part of the quarry.  The horse, and such other animals, are
within the reach and power of man; to ease him of his labour, and to
take upon them a thousand burdens.  They are born to carry, to
walk, to supply man’s weakness, and to obey all his motions. 
Oxen are endowed with strength and patience, in order to draw the plough
and till the ground.  Cows yield streams of milk.  Sheep have
in their fleeces a superfluity which is not for them, and which still
grows and renews, as it were to invite men to shear them every year. 
Even goats furnish man with a long hair, for which they have no use,
and of which he makes stuffs to cover himself.  The skins of some
beasts supply men with the finest and best linings, in the countries
that are most remote from the sun.</p>
<p id="xxi-p4" shownumber="no">Thus the Author of nature has clothed beasts according to their necessities;
and their spoils serve afterwards to clothe men, and keep them warm
in those frozen climes.  The living creatures that have little
or no hair have a very thick and very hard skin, like scales; others
have even scales that cover one another, as tiles on the top of a house,
and which either open or shut, as it best suits with the living creature,
either to extend itself or shrink.  These skins and scales serve
the necessities of men: and thus in nature, not only plants but animals
also are made for our use.  Wild beasts themselves either grow
tame or, at least, are afraid of man.  If all countries were peopled
and governed as they ought to be, there would not be anywhere beasts
should attack men.  For no wild beasts would be found but in remote
forests, and they would be preserved in order to exercise the courage,
strength, and dexterity of mankind, by a sport that should represent
war; so that there never would be any occasion for real wars among nations. 
But observe that living creatures that are noxious to man are the least
teeming, and that the most useful multiply most.  There are, beyond
comparison, more oxen and sheep killed than bears or wolves; and nevertheless
the number of bears and wolves is infinitely less than that of oxen
and sheep still on earth.  Observe likewise, with Cicero, that
the females of every species have a number of teats proportioned to
that of the young ones they generally bring forth.  The more young
they bear, with the more milk-springs has nature supplied them, to suckle
them.</p>
<p id="xxi-p5" shownumber="no">While sheep let their wool grow for our use, silk-worms, in emulation
with each other, spin rich stuffs and spend themselves to bestow them
upon us.  They make of their cod a kind of tomb, and shutting up
themselves in their own work, they are new-born under another figure,
in order to perpetuate themselves.  On the other hand, the bees
carefully suck and gather the juice of odorous and fragrant flowers,
in order to make their honey; and range it in such an order as may serve
for a pattern to men.  Several insects are transformed, sometimes
into flies, sometimes into worms, or maggots.  If one should think
such insects useless, let him consider that what makes a part of the
great spectacle of the universe, and contributes to its variety, is
not altogether useless to sedate and contemplative men.  What can
be more noble, and more magnificent, than that great number of commonwealths
of living creatures so well governed, and every species of which has
a different frame from the other?  Everything shows how much the
skill and workmanship of the artificer surpasses the vile matter he
has worked upon.  Every living creature, nay even gnats, appear
wonderful to me.  If one finds them troublesome, he ought to consider
that it is necessary that some anxiety and pain be mixed with man’s
conveniences: for if nothing should moderate his pleasures, and exercise
his patience, he would either grow soft and effeminate, or forget himself.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxii" next="xxiii" prev="xxi" title="SECT.  XX.  Admirable Order in which all the Bodies that make up the Universe are ranged.">
<h3 id="xxii-p0.1">SECT.  XX.  Admirable Order in which all the Bodies that
make up the Universe are ranged.</h3>

<p id="xxii-p1" shownumber="no">Let us now consider the wonders that shine equally both in the largest
and the smallest bodies.  On the one side, I see the sun so many
thousand times bigger than the earth; I see him circulating in a space,
in comparison of which he is himself but a bright atom.  I see
other stars, perhaps still bigger than he, that roll in other regions,
still farther distant from us.  Beyond those regions, which escape
all measure, I still confusedly perceive other stars, which can neither
be counted nor distinguished.  The earth, on which I stand, is
but one point, in proportion to the whole, in which no bound can ever
be found.  The whole is so well put together, that not one single
atom can be put out of its place without unhinging this immense machine;
and it moves in such excellent order that its very motion perpetuates
its variety and perfection.  Sure it must be the hand of a being
that does everything without any trouble that still keeps steady, and
governs this great work for so many ages; and whose fingers play with
the universe, to speak with the Scripture.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxiii" next="xxiv" prev="xxii" title="SECT.  XXI.  Wonders of the Infinitely Little.">
<h3 id="xxiii-p0.1">SECT.  XXI.  Wonders of the Infinitely Little.</h3>

<p id="xxiii-p1" shownumber="no">On the other hand the work is no less to be admired in little than
in great: for I find as well in little as in great a kind of infinite
that astonishes me.  It surpasses my imagination to find in a hand-worm,
as one does in an elephant or whale, limbs perfectly well organised;
a head, a body, legs, and feet, as distinct and as well formed as those
of the biggest animals.  There are in every part of those living
atoms, muscles, nerves, veins, arteries, blood; and in that blood ramous
particles and humours; in these humours some drops that are themselves
composed of several particles: nor can one ever stop in the discussion
of this infinite composition of so infinite a whole.</p>
<p id="xxiii-p2" shownumber="no">The microscope discovers to us in every object as it were a thousand
other objects that had escaped our notice.  But how many other
objects are there in every object discovered by the microscope which
the microscope itself cannot discover?  What should not we see
if we could still subtilise and improve more and more the instruments
that help out weak and dull sight?  Let us supply by our imagination
what our eyes are defective in; and let our fancy itself be a kind of
microscope, and represent to us in every atom a thousand new and invisible
worlds: but it will never be able incessantly to paint to us new discoveries
in little bodies; it will be tired, and forced at last to stop, and
sink, leaving in the smallest organ of a body a thousand wonders undiscovered.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxiv" next="xxv" prev="xxiii" title="SECT.  XXII.  Of the Structure or Frame of the Animal.">
<h3 id="xxiv-p0.1">SECT.  XXII.  Of the Structure or Frame of the Animal.</h3>

<p id="xxiv-p1" shownumber="no">Let us confine ourselves within the animal’s machine, which
has three things that never can be too much admired: First, it has in
it wherewithal to defend itself against those that attack it, in order
to destroy it.  Secondly, it has a faculty of reviving itself by
food.  Thirdly, it has wherewithal to perpetuate its species by
generation.  Let us bestow some considerations on these three things.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxv" next="xxvi" prev="xxiv" title="SECT.  XXIII.  Of the Instinct of the Animal.">
<h3 id="xxv-p0.1">SECT.  XXIII.  Of the Instinct of the Animal.</h3>

<p id="xxv-p1" shownumber="no">Animals are endowed with what is called instinct, both to approach
useful and beneficial objects, and to avoid such as may be noxious and
destructive to them.  Let us not inquire wherein this instinct
consists, but content ourselves with matter of fact, without reasoning
upon it.</p>
<p id="xxv-p2" shownumber="no">The tender lamb smells his dam afar off, and runs to meet her. 
A sheep is seized with horror at the approach of a wolf, and flies away
before he can discern him.  The hound is almost infallible in finding
out a stag, a buck, or a hare, only by the scent.  There is in
every animal an impetuous spring, which, on a sudden, gathers all the
spirits; distends all the nerves; renders all the joints more supple
and pliant; and increases in an incredible manner, upon sudden dangers,
his strength, agility, speed, and cunning, in order to make him avoid
the object that threatens his destruction.  The question in this
place is not to know whether beasts are endowed with reason or understanding;
for I do not pretend to engage in any philosophical inquiry.  The
motions I speak of are entirely indeliberate, even in the machine of
man.  If, for instance, a man that dances on a rope should, at
that time, reason on the laws and rules of equilibrium, his reasoning
would make him lose that very equilibrium which he preserves admirably
well without arguing upon the matter, and reason would then be of no
other use to him but to throw him on the ground.  The same happens
with beasts; nor will it avail anything to object that they reason as
well as men, for this objection does not in the least weaken my proof;
and their reasoning can never serve to account for the motions we admire
most in them.  Will any one affirm that they know the nicest rules
of mechanics, which they observe with perfect exactness, whenever they
are to run, leap, swim, hide themselves, double, use shifts to avoid
pursuing hounds, or to make use of the strongest part of their bodies
to defend themselves?  Will he say that they naturally understand
the mathematics which men are ignorant of?  Will he dare to advance
that they perform with deliberation and knowledge all those impetuous
and yet so exact motions which even men perform without study or premeditation? 
Will he allow them to make use of reason in those motions, wherein it
is certain man does not?  It is an instinct, will he say, that
beasts are governed by.  I grant it: for it is, indeed, an instinct. 
But this instinct is an admirable sagacity and dexterity, not in the
beasts, who neither do, nor can then, have time to reason, but in the
superior wisdom that governs them.  That instinct, or wisdom, that
thinks and watches for beasts, in indeliberate things, wherein they
could neither watch nor think, even supposing them to be as reasonable
as we, can be no other than the wisdom of the Artificer that made these
machines.  Let us therefore talk no more of instinct or nature,
which are but fine empty names in the mouth of the generality that pronounce
them.  There is in what they call nature and instinct a superior
art and contrivance, of which human invention is but a shadow. 
What is beyond all question is, that there are in beasts a prodigious
number of motions entirely indeliberate, and which yet are performed
according to the nicest rules of mechanics.  It is the machine
alone that follows those rules: which is a fact independent from all
philosophy; and matter of fact is ever decisive.  What would a
man think of a watch that should fly or slip away, turn, again, or defend
itself, for its own preservation, if he went about to break it? 
Would he not admire the skill of the artificer?  Could he be induced
to believe that the springs of that watch had formed, proportioned,
ranged, and united themselves, by mere chance?  Could he imagine
that he had clearly explained and accounted for such industrious and
skilful operation by talking of the nature and instinct of a watch that
should exactly show the hour to his master, and slip away from such
as should go about to break its springs to pieces?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxvi" next="xxvii" prev="xxv" title="SECT.  XXIV.  Of Food.">
<h3 id="xxvi-p0.1">SECT.  XXIV.  Of Food.</h3>

<p id="xxvi-p1" shownumber="no">What is more noble than a machine which continually repairs and renews
itself?  The animal, stinted to his own strength, is soon tired
and exhausted by labour; but the more he takes pains, the more he finds
himself pressed to make himself amends for his labour, by more plentiful
feeding.  Aliments daily restore the strength he had lost. 
He puts into his body another substance that becomes his own, by a kind
of metamorphosis.  At first it is pounded, and being changed into
a liquor, it purifies, as if it were strained through a sieve, in order
to separate anything that is gross from it; afterwards it arrives at
the centre, or focus of the spirits, where it is subtilised, and becomes
blood.  And running at last, and penetrating through numberless
vessels to moisten all the members, it filtrates in the flesh, and becomes
itself flesh.  So many aliments, and liquors of various colours,
are then no more than one and the same flesh; and food which was but
an inanimate body preserves the life of the animal, and becomes part
of the animal himself; the other parts of which he was composed being
exhaled by an insensible and continual transpiration.  The matter
which, for instance, was four years ago such a horse, is now but air,
or dung.  What was then either hay, or oats, is become that same
horse, so fiery and vigorous—at least, he is accounted the same
horse, notwithstanding this insensible change of his substance.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxvii" next="xxviii" prev="xxvi" title="SECT.  XXV.  Of Sleep.">
<h3 id="xxvii-p0.1">SECT.  XXV.  Of Sleep.</h3>

<p id="xxvii-p1" shownumber="no">The natural attendant of food is sleep; in which the animal forbears
not only all his outward motions, but also all the principal inward
operations which might too much stir and dissipate the spirits. 
He only retains respiration, and digestion; so that all motions that
might wear out his strength are suspended, and all such as are proper
to recruit and renew it go on freely of themselves.  This repose,
which is a kind of enchantment, returns every night, while darkness
interrupts and hinders labour.  Now, who is it that contrived such
a suspension?  Who is it that so well chose the operations that
ought to continue; and, with so just discernment, excluded all such
as ought to be interrupted?  The next day all past fatigue is gone
and vanished.  The animal works on, as if he had never worked before;
and this reviving gives him a vivacity and vigour that invites him to
new labour.  Thus the nerves are still full of spirits, the flesh
smooth, the skin whole, though one would think it should waste and tear;
the living body of the animal soon wears out inanimate bodies, even
the most solid that are about it; and yet does not wear out itself. 
The skin of a horse, for instance, wears out several saddles; and the
flesh of a child, though very delicate and tender, wears out many clothes,
whilst it daily grows stronger.  If this renewing of spirits were
perfect, it would be real immortality, and the gift of eternal youth. 
But the same being imperfect, the animal insensibly loses his strength,
decays and grows old, because everything that is created ought to bear
a mark of nothingness from which it was drawn; and have an end.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxviii" next="xxix" prev="xxvii" title="SECT.  XXVI.  Of Generation.">
<h3 id="xxviii-p0.1">SECT.  XXVI.  Of Generation.</h3>

<p id="xxviii-p1" shownumber="no">What is more admirable than the multiplication of animals? 
Look upon the individuals: no animal is immortal.  Everything grows
old, everything passes away, everything disappears, everything, in short,
is annihilated.  Look upon the species: everything subsists, everything
is permanent and immutable, though in a constant vicissitude. 
Ever since there have been on earth men that have taken care to preserve
the memory of events, no lions, tigers, wild boars, or bears, were ever
known to form themselves by chance in caves or forests.  Neither
do we see any fortuitous productions of dogs or cats.  Bulls and
sheep are never born of themselves, either in stables, folds, or on
pasture grounds.  Every one of those animals owes his birth to
a certain male and female of his species.</p>
<p id="xxviii-p2" shownumber="no">All those different species are preserved much the same in all ages. 
We do not find that for three thousand years past any one has perished
or ceased; neither do we find that any one multiplies to such an excess
as to be a nuisance or inconveniency to the rest.  If the species
of lions, bears, and tigers multiplied to a certain excessive degree,
they would not only destroy the species of stags, bucks, sheep, goats,
and bulls, but even get the mastery over mankind, and unpeople the earth. 
Now who maintains so just a measure as never either to extinguish those
different species, or never to suffer them to multiply too fast?</p>
<p id="xxviii-p3" shownumber="no">But this continual propagation of every species is a wonder with
which we are grown too familiar.  What would a man think of a watchmaker
who should have the art to make watches, which, of themselves, should
produce others <span class="ital" id="xxviii-p3.1">ad infinitum</span> in such a manner that two original
watches should be sufficient to multiply and perpetuate their species
over the whole earth?  What would he say of an architect that should
have the skill to build houses, which should build others, to renew
the habitations of men, before the first should decay and be ready to
fall to the ground?  It is, however, what we daily see among animals. 
They are no more, if you please, than mere machines, as watches are. 
But, after all, the Author of these machines has endowed them with a
faculty to reproduce or perpetuate themselves <span class="ital" id="xxviii-p3.2">ad infinitum</span> by
the conjunction of both sexes.  Affirm, if you please, that this
generation of animals is performed either by moulds or by an express
configuration of every individual; which of these two opinions you think
fit to pitch upon, it comes all to one; nor is the skill of the Artificer
less conspicuous.  If you suppose that at every generation the
individual, without being cast into a mould, receives a configuration
made on purpose, I ask, who it is that manages and directs the configuration
of so compounded a machine, and which argues so much art and industry? 
If, on the contrary, to avoid acknowledging any art in the case you
suppose that everything is determined by the moulds, I go back to the
moulds themselves, and ask, who is it that prepared them?  In my
opinion they are still greater matter of wonder than the very machines
which are pretended to come out of them.</p>
<p id="xxviii-p4" shownumber="no">Therefore let who will suppose that there were moulds in the animals
that lived four thousand years ago, and affirm, if he pleases, that
those moulds were so inclosed one within another <span class="ital" id="xxviii-p4.1">ad infinitum</span>,
that there was a sufficient number for all the generations of those
four thousand years; and that there is still a sufficient number ready
prepared for the formation of all the animals that shall preserve their
species in all succeeding ages.  Now, these moulds, which, as I
have observed, must have all the configuration of the animal, are as
difficult to be explained or accounted for as the animals themselves,
and are besides attended with far more unexplicable wonders.  It
is certain that the configuration of every individual animal requires
no more art and power than is necessary to frame all the springs that
make up that machine; but when a man supposes moulds: first, he must
affirm that every mould contains in little, with unconceivable niceness,
all the springs of the machine itself.  Now, it is beyond dispute
that there is more art in making so compound a work in little than in
a larger bulk.  Secondly, he must suppose that every mould, which
is an individual prepared for a first generation, contains distinctly
within itself other moulds contained within one another <span class="ital" id="xxviii-p4.2">ad infinitum</span>,
for all possible generations, in all succeeding ages.  Now what
can be more artful and more wonderful in matter of mechanism than such
a preparation of an infinite number of individuals, all formed beforehand
in one from which they are to spring?  Therefore the moulds are
of no use to explain the generations of animals without supposing any
art or skill.  For, on the contrary, moulds would argue a more
artificial mechanism and more wonderful composition.</p>
<p id="xxviii-p5" shownumber="no">What is manifest and indisputable, independently from all the systems
of philosophers, is that the fortuitous concourse of atoms never produces,
without generation, in any part of the earth, any lions, tigers, bears,
elephants, stags, bulls, sheep, cats, dogs, or horses.  These and
the like are never produced but by the encounter of two of their kind
of different sex.  The two animals that produce a third are not
the true authors of the art that shines in the composition of the animal
engendered by them.  They are so far from knowing how to perform
that art, that they do not so much as know the composition or frame
of the work that results from their generation.  Nay, they know
not so much as any particular spring of it; having been no more than
blind and unvoluntary instruments, made use of for the performance of
a marvellous art, to which they are absolute strangers, and of which
they are perfectly ignorant.  Now I would fain know whence comes
that art, which is none of theirs?  What power and wisdom knows
how to employ, for the performance of works of so ingenious and intricate
a design, instruments so uncapable to know what they are doing, or to
have any notion of it?  Nor does it avail anything to suppose that
beasts are endowed with reason.  Let a man suppose them to be as
rational as he pleases in other things, yet he must own, that in generation
they have no share in the art that is conspicuous in the composition
of the animals they produce.</p>
<p id="xxviii-p6" shownumber="no">Let us carry the thing further, and take for granted the most wonderful
instances that are given of the skill and forecast of animals. 
Let us admire, as much as you please, the certainty with which a hound
takes a spring into a third way, as soon as he finds by his nose that
the game he pursues has left no scent in the other two.  Let us
admire the hind, who, they say, throws a good way off her young fawn,
into some hidden place, that the hounds may not find him out by the
scent of his strain.  Let us even admire the spider who with her
cobwebs lays subtle snares to trap flies, and fall unawares upon them
before they can disentangle themselves.  Let us also admire the
hern, who, they say, puts his head under his wing, in order to hide
his bill under his feathers, thereby to stick the breast of the bird
of prey that stoops at him.  Let us allow the truth of all these
wonderful instances of rationality; for all nature is full of such prodigies. 
But what must we infer from them?  In good earnest, if we carefully
examine the matter, we shall find that they prove too much.  Shall
we say that animals are more rational than we?  Their instinct
has undoubtedly more certainty than our conjectures.  They have
learnt neither logic nor geometry, neither have they any course or method
of improvement, or any science.  Whatever they do is done of a
sudden without study, preparation, or deliberation.  We commit
blunders and mistakes every hour of the day after we have a long while
argued and consulted together; whereas animals, without any reasoning
or premeditation, perform every hour what seems to require most discernment,
choice, and exactness.  Their instinct is in many things infallible;
but that word instinct is but a fair name void of sense.  For what
can an instinct more just, exact, precise, and certain than reason itself
mean but a more perfect reason?  We must therefore suppose a wonderful
reason and understanding either in the work or in the artificer; either
in the machine or in him that made it.  When, for instance, I find
that a watch shows the hours with such exactness as surpasses my knowledge,
I presently conclude that if the watch itself does not reason, it must
have been made by an artificer who, in that particular, reasoned better
and had more skill than myself.  In like manner, when I see animals,
who every moment perform actions that argue a more certain art and industry
than I am master of, I immediately conclude that such marvellous art
must necessarily be either in the machine or in the artificer that framed
it.  Is it in the animal himself?  But how is it possible
he should be so wise and so infallible in some things?  And if
this art is not in him, it must of necessity be in the Supreme Artificer
that made that piece of work, just as all the art of a watch is in the
skill of the watchmaker.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxix" next="xxx" prev="xxviii" title="SECT.  XXVII.  Though Beasts commit some Mistakes, yet their Instinct is, in many cases, Infallible.">
<h3 id="xxix-p0.1">SECT.  XXVII.  Though Beasts commit some Mistakes, yet
their Instinct is, in many cases, Infallible.</h3>

<p id="xxix-p1" shownumber="no">Do not object to me that the instinct of beasts is in some things
defective, and liable to error.  It is no wonder beasts are not
infallible in everything, but it is rather a wonder they are so in many
cases.  If they were infallible in everything, they should be endowed
with a reason infinitely perfect; in short, they should be deities. 
In the works of an infinite Power there can be but a finite perfection,
otherwise God should make creatures like or equal to Himself, which
is impossible.  He therefore cannot place perfection, nor consequently
reason, in his works, without some bounds and restrictions.  But
those bounds do not prove that the work is void of order or reason. 
Because I mistake sometimes, it does not follow that I have no reason
at all, and that I do everything by mere chance, but only that my reason
is stinted and imperfect.  In like manner, because a beast is not
by his instinct infallible in everything, though he be so in many, it
does not follow that there is no manner of reason in that machine, but
only that such a machine has not a boundless reason.  But, after
all, it is a constant truth that in the operations of that machine there
is a regular conduct, a marvellous art, and a skill which in many cases
amounts to infallibility.  Now, to whom shall we ascribe this infallible
skill?  To the work, or its Artificer?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxx" next="xxxi" prev="xxix" title="SECT.  XXVIII.  It is impossible Beasts should have Souls.">
<h3 id="xxx-p0.1">SECT.  XXVIII.  It is impossible Beasts should have Souls.</h3>

<p id="xxx-p1" shownumber="no">If you affirm that beasts have souls different from their machines,
I immediately ask you, “Of what nature are those souls entirely
different from and united to bodies?  Who is it that knew how to
unite them to natures so vastly different?  Who is it that has
such absolute command over so opposite natures, as to put and keep them
in such a regular and constant a society, and wherein mutual agreement
and correspondence are so necessary and so quick?</p>
<p id="xxx-p2" shownumber="no">If, on the contrary, you suppose that the same matter may sometimes
think, and sometimes not think, according to the various wrangling and
configurations it may receive, I will not tell you in this place that
matter cannot think; and that one cannot conceive that the parts of
a stone, without adding anything to it, may ever know themselves, whatever
degree of motion, whatever figure, you may give them.  I will only
ask you now wherein that precise ranging and configuration of parts,
which you speak of, consists?  According to your opinion there
must be a degree of motion wherein matter does not yet reason, and then
another much like it wherein, on a sudden, it begins to reason and know
itself.  Now, who is it that knew how to pitch upon that precise
degree of motion?  Who is it that has discovered the line in which
the parts ought to move?  Who is it that has measured the dimensions
so nicely as to find out and state the bigness and figure every part
must have to keep all manner of proportions between themselves in the
whole?  Who is it that has regulated the outward form by which
all those bodies are to be stinted?  In a word, who is it that
has found all the combinations wherein matter thinks, and without the
least of which matter must immediately cease to think?  If you
say it is chance, I answer that you make chance rational to such a degree
as to be the source of reason itself.  Strange prejudice and intoxication
of some men, not to acknowledge a most intelligent cause, from which
we derive all intelligence; and rather choose to affirm that the purest
reason is but the effect of the blindest of all causes in such a subject
as matter, which of itself is altogether incapable of knowledge! 
Certainly there is nothing a man of sense would not admit rather than
so extravagant and absurd an opinion.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxxi" next="xxxii" prev="xxx" title="SECT.  XXIX.  Sentiments of some of the Ancients concerning the Soul and Knowledge of Beasts.">
<h3 id="xxxi-p0.1">SECT.  XXIX.  Sentiments of some of the Ancients concerning
the Soul and Knowledge of Beasts.</h3>

<p id="xxxi-p1" shownumber="no">The philosophy of the ancients, though very lame and imperfect, had
nevertheless a glimpse of this difficulty; and, therefore, in order
to remove it, some of them pretended that the Divine Spirit interspersed
and scattered throughout the universe is a superior Wisdom that continually
operates in all nature, especially in animals, just as souls act in
bodies; and that this continual impression or impulse of the Divine
Spirit, which the vulgar call instinct, without knowing the true signification
of that word, was the life of all living creatures.  They added,
“That those sparks of the Divine Spirit were the principle of
all generations; that animals received them in their conception and
at their birth; and that the moment they died those divine particles
disengaged themselves from all terrestrial matter in order to fly up
to heaven, where they shone and rolled among the stars.  It is
this philosophy, at once so magnificent and so fabulous, which Virgil
so gracefully expresses in the following verses upon bees:—</p>
<p id="xxxi-p2" shownumber="no">“<span class="ital" id="xxxi-p2.1">Esse apibus partem</span> <span class="ital" id="xxxi-p2.2">divinæ mentis</span>, <span class="ital" id="xxxi-p2.3">et
haustus<br />Ætherios dixere: Deum namque ire per omnes<br />Terrasque</span>,
<span class="ital" id="xxxi-p2.6">tractusque maris</span>, <span class="ital" id="xxxi-p2.7">cælumque profundum</span>.<br /><span class="ital" id="xxxi-p2.9">Hinc
pecudes</span>, <span class="ital" id="xxxi-p2.10">armenta viros</span>, <span class="ital" id="xxxi-p2.11">genus omne ferarum</span>,<br /><span class="ital" id="xxxi-p2.13">Quemque
sibi tenues nascentem arcessere vitas.<br />Scilicet huc reddi deinde</span>,
<span class="ital" id="xxxi-p2.15">ac resoluta referri<br />Omnia</span>, <span class="ital" id="xxxi-p2.17">nec morti esse locum</span>,
<span class="ital" id="xxxi-p2.18">sed viva volare<br />Sideris in numerum</span>, <span class="ital" id="xxxi-p2.20">atque alto succedere
cælo</span>.”</p>
<p id="xxxi-p3" shownumber="no">That is:—</p>
<p id="xxxi-p4" shownumber="no">“Induced by such examples, some have taught<br />That bees
have portions of ethereal thought,<br />Endued with particles of heavenly
fires,<br />For God the whole created mass inspires.<br />Through heaven,
and earth, and ocean depth He throws<br />His influence round, and kindles
as He goes.<br />Hence flocks, and herds, and men, and beasts, and fowls,<br />With
breath are quickened, and attract their souls.<br />Hence take the forms
His prescience did ordain,<br />And into Him, at length, resolve again.<br />No
room is left for death: they mount the sky,<br />And to their own congenial
planets fly.”</p>
<p id="xxxi-p5" shownumber="no"><span class="ital" id="xxxi-p5.1">Dryden’s</span> “<span class="ital" id="xxxi-p5.2">Virgil</span>.”</p>
<p id="xxxi-p6" shownumber="no">That Divine Wisdom that moves all the known parts of the world had
made so deep an impression upon the Stoics, and on Plato before them,
that they believed the whole world to be an animal, but a rational and
wise animal—in short, the Supreme God.  This philosophy reduced
Polytheism, or the multitude of gods, to Deism, or one God, and that
one God to Nature, which according to them was eternal, infallible,
intelligent, omnipotent, and divine.  Thus philosophers, by striving
to keep from and rectify the notions of poets, dwindled again at last
into poetical fancies, since they assigned, as the inventors of fables
did, a life, an intelligence, an art, and a design to all the parts
of the universe that appear most inanimate.  Undoubtedly they were
sensible of the wonderful art that is conspicuous in nature, and their
only mistake lay in ascribing to the work the skill of the Artificer.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxxii" next="xxxiii" prev="xxxi" title="SECT.  XXX.  Of Man.">
<h3 id="xxxii-p0.1">SECT.  XXX.  Of Man.</h3>

<p id="xxxii-p1" shownumber="no">Let us not stop any longer with animals inferior to man.  It
is high time to consider and study the nature of man himself, in order
to discover Him whose image he is said to bear.  I know but two
sorts of beings in all nature: those that are endowed with knowledge
or reason, and those that are not Now man is a compound of these two
modes of being.  He has a body, as the most inanimate corporeal
beings have; and he has a spirit, a mind, or a soul—that is, a
thought whereby he knows himself, and perceives what is about him. 
If it be true that there is a First Being who has drawn or created all
the rest from nothing, man is truly His image; for he has, like Him,
in his nature all the real perfection that is to be found in those two
various kinds or modes of being.  But an image is but an image
still, and can be but an adumbration or shadow of the true Perfect Being.</p>
<p id="xxxii-p2" shownumber="no">Let us begin to study man by the contemplation of his body. 
“I know not,” said a mother to her children in the Holy
Writ, “how you were formed in my womb.”  Nor is it,
indeed, the wisdom of the parents that forms so compounded and so regular
a work.  They have no share in that wonderful art; let us therefore
leave them, and trace it up higher.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxxiii" next="xxxiv" prev="xxxii" title="SECT.  XXXI.  Of the Structure of Man’s Body.">
<h3 id="xxxiii-p0.1">SECT.  XXXI.  Of the Structure of Man’s Body.</h3>

<p id="xxxiii-p1" shownumber="no">The body is made of clay; but let us admire the Hand that framed
and polished it.  The Artificer’s Seal is stamped upon His
work.  He seems to have delighted in making a masterpiece with
so vile a matter.  Let us cast our eyes upon that body, in which
the bones sustain the flesh that covers them.  The nerves that
are extended in it make up all its strength; and the muscles with which
the sinews weave themselves, either by swelling or extending themselves,
perform the most exact and regular motions.  The bones are divided
at certain distances, but they have joints, whereby they are set one
within another, and are tied by nerves and tendons.  Cicero admires,
with reason, the excellent art with which the bones are knit together. 
For what is more supple for all various motions?  And, on the other
hand, what is more firm and durable?  Even after a body is dead,
and its parts are separated by corruption, we find that these joints
and ligaments can hardly be destroyed.  Thus this human machine
or frame is either straight or crooked, stiff or supple, as we please. 
From the brain, which is the source of all the nerves, spring the spirits,
which are so subtle that they escape the sight; and nevertheless so
real, and of so great activity and force, that they perform all the
motions of the machine, and make up all in strength.  These spirits
are in an instant conveyed to the very extremities of the members. 
Sometimes they flow gently and regularly, sometimes they move with impetuosity,
as occasion requires; and they vary <span class="ital" id="xxxiii-p1.1">ad infinitum</span> the postures,
gestures, and other actions of the body.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxxiv" next="xxxv" prev="xxxiii" title="SECT.  XXXII.  Of the Skin.">
<h3 id="xxxiv-p0.1">SECT.  XXXII.  Of the Skin.</h3>

<p id="xxxiv-p1" shownumber="no">Let us consider the flesh.  It is covered in certain places
with a soft and tender skin, for the ornament of the body.  If
that skin, that renders the object so agreeable, and gives it so sweet
a colour, were taken off, the same object would become ghastly, and
create horror.  In other places that same skin is harder and thicker,
in order to resist the fatigue of those parts.  As, for instance,
how harder is the skin of the feet than that of the face?  And
that of the hinder part of the head than that of the forehead? 
That skin is all over full of holes like a sieve: but those holes, which
are called pores, are imperceptible.  Although sweat and other
transpirations exhale through those pores, the blood never runs out
that way.  That skin has all the tenderness necessary to make it
transparent, and give the face a lively, sweet, and graceful colour. 
If the skin were less close, and less smooth, the face would look bloody,
and excoriated.  Now, who is that knew how to temper and mix those
colours with such nicety as to make a carnation which painters admire,
but never can perfectly imitate?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxxv" next="xxxvi" prev="xxxiv" title="SECT.  XXXIII.  Of Veins and Arteries.">
<h3 id="xxxv-p0.1">SECT.  XXXIII.  Of Veins and Arteries.</h3>

<p id="xxxv-p1" shownumber="no">There are in man’s body numberless branches of blood-vessels. 
Some of them carry the blood from the centre to the extreme parts, and
are called arteries.  Through those various vessels runs the blood,
a liquor soft and oily, and by this oiliness proper to retain the most
subtle spirits, just as the most subtle and spirituous essences are
preserved in gummy bodies.  This blood moistens the flesh, as springs
and rivers water the earth; and after it has filtrated in the flesh,
it returns to its source, more slowly, and less full of spirits: but
it renews, and is again subtilised in that source, in order to circulate
without ceasing.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxxvi" next="xxxvii" prev="xxxv" title="SECT.  XXXIV.  Of the Bones, and their Jointing.">
<h3 id="xxxvi-p0.1">SECT.  XXXIV.  Of the Bones, and their Jointing.</h3>

<p id="xxxvi-p1" shownumber="no">Do you consider that excellent order and proportion of the limbs? 
The legs and thighs are great bones jointed one with another, and knit
together by tendons.  They are two sorts of pillars, equal and
regular, erected to support the whole fabric.  But those pillars
fold; and the rotula of the knee is a bone of a circular figure, which
is placed on purpose on the joint, in order to fill it up, and preserve
it, when the bones fold, for the bending of the knee.  Each column
or pillar has its pedestal, which is composed of various inlaid parts,
so well jointed together, that they can either bend, or keep stiff,
as occasion requires.  The pedestal, I mean the foot, turns, at
a man’s pleasure, under the pillar.  In this foot we find
nothing but nerves, tendons, and little bones closely knit, that this
part may, at once, be either more supple or more firm, according to
various occasions.  Even the toes, with their articles and nails,
serve to feel the ground a man walks on, to lean and stand with more
dexterity and nimbleness, the better to preserve the equilibrium of
the body, to rise, or to stoop.  The two feet stretch forward,
to keep the body from falling that way, when it stoops or bends. 
The two pillars are jointed together at the top, to bear up the rest
of the body, but are still divided there in such a manner, that that
joint affords man the conveniency of resting himself, by sitting on
the two biggest muscles of the body.</p>
<p id="xxxvi-p2" shownumber="no">The body of the structure is proportioned to the height of the pillars. 
It contains such parts as are necessary for life, and which consequently
ought to be placed in the centre, and shut up in the securest place. 
Therefore two rows of ribs pretty close to one another, that come out
of the backbone, as the branches of a tree do from its trunk, form a
kind of hoop, to hide and shelter those noble and tender parts. 
But because the ribs could not entirely shut up that centre of the human
body, without hindering the dilatation of the stomach and of the entrails,
they form that hoop but to a certain place, below which they leave an
empty space, that the inside may freely distend and stretch, both for
respiration and feeding.</p>
<p id="xxxvi-p3" shownumber="no">As for the backbone, all the works of man afford nothing so artfully
and curiously wrought.  It would be too stiff, and too frangible
or brittle, if it were made of one single bone: and in such a case man
could never bend or stoop.  The author of this machine has prevented
that inconveniency by forming vertebræ, which jointing one with
another make up a whole, consisting of several pieces of bones, more
strong than if it were of a single piece.  This compound being
sometimes supple and pliant, and sometimes stiff, stands either upright,
or bends, in a moment, as a man pleases.  All these vertebræ
have in the middle a gutter or channel, that serves to convey a continuation
of the substance of the brain to the extremities of the body, and with
speed to send thither spirits through that pipe.</p>
<p id="xxxvi-p4" shownumber="no">But who can forbear admiring the nature of the bones?  They
are very hard; and we see that even the corruption of all the rest of
the body, after death, does not affect them.  Nevertheless, they
are full of numberless holes and cavities that make them lighter; and
in the middle they are full of the marrow, or pith, that is to nourish
them.  They are bored exactly in those places through which the
ligaments that knit them are to pass.  Moreover, their extremities
are bigger than the middle, and form, as it were, two semicircular heads,
to make one bone turn more easily with another, that so the whole may
fold and bend without trouble.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxxvii" next="xxxviii" prev="xxxvi" title="SECT.  XXXV.  Of the Organs.">
<h3 id="xxxvii-p0.1">SECT.  XXXV.  Of the Organs.</h3>

<p id="xxxvii-p1" shownumber="no">Within the enclosure of the ribs are placed in order all the great
organs such as serve to make a man breathe; such as digest the aliments;
and such as make new blood.  Respiration, or breathing, is necessary
to temper inward heat, occasioned by the boiling of the blood, and by
the impetuous course of the spirits.  The air is a kind of food
that nourishes the animal, and by means of which he renews himself every
moment of his life.  Nor is digestion less necessary to prepare
sensible aliments towards their being changed into blood, which is a
liquor apt to penetrate everywhere, and to thicken into flesh in the
extreme parts, in order to repair in all the members what they lose
continually both by transpiration and the waste of spirits.  The
lungs are like great covers, which being spongy, easily dilate and contract
themselves, and as they incessantly take in and blow out a great deal
of air, they form a kind of bellows that are in perpetual motion. 
The stomach has a dissolvent that causes hunger, and puts man in mind
of his want of food.  That dissolvent, which stimulates and pricks
the stomach, does, by that very uneasiness, prepare for it a very lively
pleasure, when its craving is satisfied by the aliments.  Then
man, with delight, fills his belly with strange matter, which would
create horror in him if he could see it as soon as it has entered his
stomach, and which even displeases him, when he sees it being already
satisfied.  The stomach is made in the figure of a bagpipe. 
There the aliments being dissolved by a quick coction, or digestion,
are all confounded, and make up a soft liquor, which afterwards becomes
a kind of milk, called chyle; and which being at last brought into the
heart, receives there, through the plenty of spirits, the form, vivacity,
and colour of blood.  But while the purest juice of the aliments
passes from the stomach into the pipes destined for the preparation
of chyle and blood, the gross particles of the same aliments are separated,
just as bran is from flour by a sieve; and they are dejected downwards
to ease the body of them, through the most hidden passages, and the
most remote from the organs of the senses, lest these be offended at
them.  Thus the wonders of this machine are so great and numerous,
that we find some unfathomable, even in the most abject and mortifying
functions of the body, which modesty will not allow to be more particularly
explained.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxxviii" next="xxxix" prev="xxxvii" title="SECT.  XXXVI.  Of the Inward Parts.">
<h3 id="xxxviii-p0.1">SECT.  XXXVI.  Of the Inward Parts.</h3>

<p id="xxxviii-p1" shownumber="no">I own that the inward parts are not so agreeable to the sight as
the outward; but then be pleased to observe they are not made to be
seen.  Nay, it was necessary according to art and design that they
should not be discovered without horror, and that a man should not without
violent reluctance go about to discover them by cutting open this machine
in another man.  It is this very horror that prepares compassion
and humanity in the hearts of men when one sees another wounded or hurt. 
Add to this, with St. Austin, that there are in those inward parts a
proportion, order, and mechanism which still please more an attentive,
inquisitive mind than external beauty can please the eyes of the body. 
That inside of man—which is at once so ghastly and horrid and
so wonderful and admirable—is exactly as it should be to denote
dirt and clay wrought by a Divine hand, for we find in it both the frailty
of the creature and the art of the Creator.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xxxix" next="xl" prev="xxxviii" title="SECT.  XXXVII.  Of the Arms and their Use.">
<h3 id="xxxix-p0.1">SECT.  XXXVII.  Of the Arms and their Use.</h3>

<p id="xxxix-p1" shownumber="no">From the top of that precious fabric we have described hang the two
arms, which are terminated by the hands, and which bear a perfect symmetry
one with another.  The arms are knit with the shoulders in such
a manner that they have a free motion, in that joint.  They are
besides divided at the elbow and at the wrist that they may fold, bend,
and turn with quickness.  The arms are of a just length to reach
all the parts of the body.  They are nervous and full of muscles,
that they may, as well as the back, be often in action and sustain the
greatest fatigue of all the body.  The hands are a contexture of
nerves and little bones set one within another in such a manner that
they have all the strength and suppleness necessary to feel the neighbouring
bodies, to seize on them, hold them fast, throw them, draw them to one,
push them off, disentangle them, and untie them one from another.</p>
<p id="xxxix-p2" shownumber="no">The fingers, the ends of which are armed with nails, are by the delicacy
and variety of their motions contrived to exercise the most curious
and marvellous arts.  The arms and hands serve also, according
as they are either extended, folded, or turned, to poise the body in
such a manner as that it may stoop without any danger of falling. 
The whole machine has, besides, independently from all after-thoughts,
a kind of spring that poises it on a sudden and makes it find the equilibrium
in all its different postures and positions.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xl" next="xli" prev="xxxix" title="SECT.  XXXVIII.  Of the Neck and Head.">
<h3 id="xl-p0.1">SECT.  XXXVIII.  Of the Neck and Head.</h3>

<p id="xl-p1" shownumber="no">Above the body rises the neck, which is either firm or flexible at
pleasure.  Must a man bear a heavy burden on his head?  This
neck becomes as stiff as if it were made up of one single bone. 
Has he a mind to bow or turn his head?  The neck bends every way
as if all its bones were disjointed.  This neck, a little raised
above the shoulders, bears up with ease the head, which over-rules and
governs the whole body.  If it were less big it would bear no proportion
with the rest of the machine; and if it were bigger it would not only
be disproportioned and deformed, but, besides, its weight would both
crush the neck and put man in danger of falling on the side it should
lean a little too much.  This head, fortified on all sides by very
thick and very hard bones in order the better to preserve the precious
treasure it encloses, is jointed with the vertebræ of the neck,
and has a very quick communication with all the other parts of the body. 
It contains the brain, whose moist, soft, and spongy substance is made
up of tender filaments or threads woven together; this is the centre
of all the wonders we shall speak of afterwards.  The skull is
regularly perforated, or bored, with exact proportion, and symmetry,
for, the two eyes, the two ears, the mouth, and the nostrils. 
There are nerves destined for sensations, that exercise and play in
most of those pipes.  The nose, which has no nerves for its sensation,
has a cribriform, or spongy bone, to let odours pass on to the brain. 
Amongst the organs of these sensations the chief are double, to preserve
to one side what the other might happen to be defective in by any accident. 
These two organs of the same sensation are symmetrically placed either
on the forepart or on the sides, that man may use them with more ease
to the right or to the left or right against him—that is to say,
towards the places his joints direct his steps and all his actions. 
Besides, the flexibility of the neck makes all those organs turn in
an instant which way soever he pleases.  All the hinder part of
the head, which is the least able to defend itself, is therefore the
thickest.  It is adorned with hair which at the same time serves
to fortify the head against the injuries of the air; and, on the other
hand, the hair likewise adorns the fore part of the head and renders
the face more graceful.  The face is the fore part of the head,
wherein the principal sensations meet and centre with an order and proportion
that render it very beautiful unless some accident or other happen to
alter and impair so regular a piece of work.  The two eyes are
equal, being placed about the middle, on the two sides of the head,
that they may, without trouble, discover afar off both on the right
and left all strange objects, and that they may commodiously watch for
the safety of all the parts of the body.  The exact symmetry with
which they are placed is the ornament of the face; and He that made
them has kindled in them I know not what celestial flame, the like of
which all the rest of nature does not afford.  These eyes are a
sort of looking-glasses, wherein all the objects of the whole world
are painted by turns and without confusion in the bottom of the retina
that the thinking part of man may see them in those looking-glasses. 
But though we perceive all objects by a double organ, yet we never see
the objects double, because the two nerves that are subservient to sight
in our eyes are but two branches that unite in one pipe, as the two
glasses of a pair of spectacles unite in the upper part that joins them
together.  The two eyes are adorned with two equal eyebrows, and,
that they may open and close, they are wrapped up with lids edged with
hair that defend so delicate a part.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xli" next="xlii" prev="xl" title="SECT.  XXXIX.  Of the Forehead and Other Parts of the Face.">
<h3 id="xli-p0.1">SECT.  XXXIX.  Of the Forehead and Other Parts of the
Face.</h3>

<p id="xli-p1" shownumber="no">The forehead gives majesty and gracefulness to all the face, and
serves to heighten all its features.  Were it not for the nose,
which is placed in the middle, the whole face would look flat and deformed,
of which they are fully convinced who have happened to see men in whom
that part of the face is mutilated.  It is placed just above the
mouth, that it may the more easily discern, by the odours, whatever
is most proper to feed man.  The two nostrils serve at once both
for the respiration and smell.  Look upon the lips: their lively
colour, freshness, figure, seat, and proportion, with the other features,
render the face most beautiful.  The mouth, by the correspondence
of its motions with those of the eyes, animates, gladdens, suddens,
softens, or troubles the face, and by sensible marks expresses every
passion.  The lips not only open to receive food, but by their
suppleness and the variety of their motions serve likewise to vary the
sounds that form speech.  When they open they discover a double
row of teeth with which the mouth is adorned.  These teeth are
little bones set in order in the two jaw-bones, which have a spring
to open and another to shut in such a manner that the teeth grind, like
a mill, the aliments in order to prepare their digestion.  But
these aliments thus ground go down into the stomach, through a pipe
different from that through which we breathe, and these two pipes, though
so neighbouring, have nothing common.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xlii" next="xliii" prev="xli" title="SECT.  XL.  Of the Tongue and Teeth.">
<h3 id="xlii-p0.1">SECT.  XL.  Of the Tongue and Teeth.</h3>

<p id="xlii-p1" shownumber="no">The tongue is a contexture of small muscles and nerves so very supple,
that it winds and turns like a serpent, with unconceivable mobility
and pliantness.  It performs in the mouth the same office which
either the fingers or the bow of a master of music perform on a musical
instrument: for sometimes it strikes the teeth, sometimes the roof of
the mouth.  There is a pipe that goes into the inside of the neck,
called throat, from the roof of the mouth to the breast, which is made
up of cartilaginous rings nicely set one within another, and lined within
with a very smooth membrane, in order to render the air that is pushed
from the lungs more sonorous.  On the side of the roof of the mouth
the end of that pipe is opened like a flute, by a slit, that either
extends, or contracts itself as is necessary to render the voice either
big or slender, hollow or clear.  But lest the aliments, which
have their separate pipe, should slide into the windpipe I have been
describing, there is a kind of valve that lies on the orifice of the
organ of the voice, and playing like a drawbridge, lets the aliments
freely pass through their proper channel, but never suffers the least
particle or drop to fall into the slit of the windpipe.  This sort
of valve has a very free motion, and easily turns any way, so that by
shaking on that half-opened orifice, it performs the softest modulations
of the voice.  This instance is sufficient to show, by-the-by,
and without entering long-winded details of anatomy, what a marvellous
art there is in the frame of the inward parts.  And indeed the
organ I have described is the most perfect of all musical instruments,
nor have these any perfection, but so far as they imitate that.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xliii" next="xliv" prev="xlii" title="SECT.  XLI.  Of the Smell, Taste, and Hearing.">
<h3 id="xliii-p0.1">SECT.  XLI.  Of the Smell, Taste, and Hearing.</h3>

<p id="xliii-p1" shownumber="no">Who were able to explain the niceness of the organs by which man
discerns the numberless savours and odours of bodies?  But how
is it possible for so many different voices to strike at once my ear
without confounding one another, and for those sounds to leave in me,
after they have ceased to be, so lively and so distinct images of what
they have been?  How careful was the Artificer who made our bodies
to give our eyes a moist, smooth, and sliding cover to close them; and
why did He leave our ears open?  Because, says Cicero, the eyes
must be shut against the light in order to sleep; and, in the meantime,
the ears ought to remain open in order to give us warning, and wake
us by the report of noise, when we are in danger of being surprised. 
Who is it that, in an instant, imprints in my eye the heaven, the sea,
and the earth, seated at almost an infinite distance?  How can
the faithful images of all the objects of the universe, from the sun
to an atom, range themselves distinctly in so small an organ? 
Is not the substance of the brain, which preserves, in order, such lively
representations of all the objects that have made an impression upon
us ever since we were in the world, a most wonderful prodigy? 
Men admire with reason the invention of books, wherein the history of
so many events, and the collection of so many thoughts, are preserved. 
But what comparison can be made between the best book and the brain
of a learned man?  There is no doubt but such a brain is a collection
infinitely more precious, and of a far more excellent contrivance, than
a book.  It is in that small repository that a man never misses
finding the images he has occasion for.  He calls them, and they
come; he dismisses them, and they sink I know not where, and disappear,
to make room for others.  A man shuts or opens his fancy at pleasure,
like a book.  He turns, as it were, its leaves; and, in an instant,
goes from one end to the other.  There is even in memory a sort
of table, like the index of a book, which shows where certain remote
images are to be found.  We do not find that these innumerable
characters, which the mind of man reads inwardly with so much rapidity,
leave any distinct trace or print in the brain, when we open it. 
That admirable book is but a soft substance, or a sort of bottom made
up of tender threads, woven one with another.  Now what skilful
hand has laid up in that kind of dirt, which appears so shapeless, such
precious images, ranged with such excellent and curious art?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xliv" next="xlv" prev="xliii" title="SECT.  XLII.  Of the Proportion of Man’s Body.">
<h3 id="xliv-p0.1">SECT.  XLII.  Of the Proportion of Man’s Body.</h3>

<p id="xliv-p1" shownumber="no">Such is the body of man in general: for I do not enter into an anatomical
detail, my design being only to discover the art that is conspicuous
in nature, by the simple cast of an eye, without any science. 
The body of man might undoubtedly be either much bigger and taller,
or much lesser and smaller.  But if, for instance, it were but
one foot high, it would be insulted by most animals, that would tread
and crush it under their feet.  If it were as tall as a high steeple,
a small number of men would in a few days consume all the aliments a
whole country affords.  They could find neither horses nor any
other beasts of burden either to carry them on their backs or draw them
in a machine with wheels; nor could they find sufficient quantity of
materials to build houses proportioned to their bigness; and as there
could be but a small number of men upon earth, so they should want most
conveniences.  Now, who is it that has so well regulated the size
of man to so just a standard?  Who is it that has fixed that of
other animals and living creatures, with proportion to that of man? 
Of all animals, man only stands upright on his feet, which gives him
a nobleness and majesty that distinguishes him, even as to the outside,
from all that lives upon earth.  Not only his figure is the noblest,
but he is also the strongest and most dextrous of all animals, in proportion
to his bigness.  Let one nicely examine the bulk and weight of
the most terrible beasts, and he will find, that though they have more
matter than the body of a man, yet a vigorous man has more strength
of body than most wild beasts.  Nor are these dreadful to him,
except in their teeth and claws.  But man, who has not such natural
arms in his limbs, has yet hands, whose dexterity to make artificial
weapons surpasses all that nature has bestowed upon beasts.  Thus
man either pierces with his darts or draws into his snares, masters,
and leads in chains the strongest and fiercest animals.  Nay, he
has the skill to tame them in their captivity, and to sport with them
as he pleases.  He teaches lions and tigers to caress him: and
gets on the back of elephants.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xlv" next="xlvi" prev="xliv" title="SECT.  XLIII.  Of the Soul, which alone, among all Creatures, Thinks and Knows.">
<h3 id="xlv-p0.1">SECT.  XLIII.  Of the Soul, which alone, among all Creatures,
Thinks and Knows.</h3>

<p id="xlv-p1" shownumber="no">But the body of man, which appears to be the masterpiece of nature,
is not to be compared to his thought.  It is certain that there
are bodies that do not think: man, for instance, ascribes no knowledge
to stone, wood, or metals, which undoubtedly are bodies.  Nay,
it is so natural to believe that matter cannot think, that all unprejudiced
men cannot forbear laughing when they hear any one assert that beasts
are but mere machines; because they cannot conceive that mere machines
can have such knowledge as they pretend to perceive in beasts. 
They think it to be like children’s playing, and talking to their
puppets, the ascribing any knowledge to mere machines.  Hence it
is that the ancients themselves, who knew no real substance but the
body, pretended, however, that the soul of a man was a fifth element,
or a sort of quintessence without name, unknown here below, indivisible,
immutable, and altogether celestial and divine, because they could not
conceive that the terrestrial matter of the four elements could think,
and know itself: <span class="ital" id="xlv-p1.1">Aristoteles quintam quandam naturam censet esse</span>,
<span class="ital" id="xlv-p1.2">è quâ sit mens.  Cogitare enim</span>, <span class="ital" id="xlv-p1.3">et providere</span>,
<span class="ital" id="xlv-p1.4">et discere</span>, <span class="ital" id="xlv-p1.5">et docere. . . . in horum quatuor generum nullo
inesse putat</span>; <span class="ital" id="xlv-p1.6">quintum genus adhibet vacans nomine.</span></p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xlvi" next="xlvii" prev="xlv" title="SECT.  XLIV.  Matter Cannot Think.">
<h3 id="xlvi-p0.1">SECT.  XLIV.  Matter Cannot Think.</h3>

<p id="xlvi-p1" shownumber="no">But let us suppose whatever you please, for I will not enter the
lists with any sect of philosophers: here is an alternative which no
philosopher can avoid.  Either matter can become a thinking substance,
without adding anything to it, or matter cannot think at all, and so
what thinks in us is a substance distinct from matter, and which is
united to it.  If matter can acquire the faculty of thinking without
adding anything to it, it must, at least, be owned that all matter does
not think, and that even some matter that now thinks did not think fifty
years ago; as, for instance, the matter of which the body of a young
man is made up did not think ten years before he was born.  It
must then be concluded that matter can acquire the faculty of thinking
by a certain configuration, ranging, and motion of its parts. 
Let us, for instance, suppose the matter of a stone, or of a heap of
sand.  It is agreed this part of matter has no manner of thought;
and therefore to make it begin to think, all its parts must be configurated,
ranged, and moved a certain way and to a certain degree.  Now,
who is it that knew how to find, with so much niceness, that proportion,
order, and motion that way, and to such a degree, above and below which
matter would never think?  Who is it that has given all those just,
exact, and precise modifications to a vile and shapeless matter, in
order to form the body of a child, and to render it rational by degrees? 
If, on the contrary, it be affirmed that matter cannot become a thinking
substance without adding something to it, and that another being must
be united to it, I ask, what will that other thinking being be, whilst
the matter, to which it is united, only moves?  Therefore, here
are two natures or substances very unlike and distinct.  We know
one by figures and local motions only; as we do the other by perceptions
and reasonings.  The one does not imply, or create the idea of
the other, for their respective ideas have nothing in common.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xlvii" next="xlviii" prev="xlvi" title="SECT.  XLV.  Of the Union of the Soul and Body, of which God alone can be the Author.">
<h3 id="xlvii-p0.1">SECT.  XLV.  Of the Union of the Soul and Body, of which
God alone can be the Author.</h3>

<p id="xlvii-p1" shownumber="no">But now, how comes it to pass that beings so unlike are so intimately
united together in man?  Whence comes it that certain motions of
the body so suddenly and so infallibly raise certain thoughts in the
soul?  Whence comes it that the thoughts of the soul, so suddenly
and so infallibly, occasion certain motions in the body?  Whence
proceeds so regular a society, for seventy or fourscore years, without
any interruption?  How comes it to pass that this union of two
beings, and two operations, so very different, make up so exact a compound,
that many are tempted to believe it to be a simple and indivisible whole? 
What hand had the skill to unite and tie together these two extremes
and opposites?  It is certain they did not unite themselves by
mutual consent, for matter having of itself neither thought nor will,
to make terms and conditions, it could not enter into an agreement with
the mind.  On the other hand, the mind does not remember that it
ever made an agreement with matter; nor could it be subjected to such
an agreement, if it had quite forgot it.  If the mind had freely,
and of its own accord, resolved to submit to the impressions of matter,
it would not, however, subject itself to them but when it should remember
such a resolution, which, besides, it might alter at pleasure. 
Nevertheless, it is certain that in spite of itself it is dependent
on the body, and that it cannot free itself from its dependence, unless
it destroy the organs of the body by a violent death.  Besides,
although the mind had voluntarily subjected itself to matter, it would
not follow that matter were reciprocally subjected to the mind. 
The mind would indeed have certain thoughts when the body should have
certain motions, but the body would not be determined to have, in its
turn, certain motions, as soon as the mind should have certain thoughts. 
Now it is most certain that this dependence is reciprocal.  Nothing
is more absolute than the command of the mind over the body.  The
mind wills, and, instantly, all the members of the body are in motion,
as if they were acted by the most powerful machines.  On the other
hand, nothing is more manifest than the power and influence of the body
over the mind.  The body is in motion, and, instantly the mind
is forced to think either with pleasure or pain, upon certain objects. 
Now, what hand equally powerful over these two divers and distinct natures
has been able to bring them both under the same yoke, and hold them
captive in so exact and inviolable a society?  Will any man say
it was chance?  If he does, will he be able either to understand
what he means, or to make it understood by others?  Has chance,
by a concourse of atoms, hooked together the parts of the body with
the mind?  If the mind can be hooked with some parts of the body,
it must have parts itself, and consequently be a perfect body, in which
case, we relapse into the first answer, which I have already confuted. 
If, on the contrary, the mind has no parts, nothing can hook it with
those of the body, nor has chance wherewithal to tie them together.</p>
<p id="xlvii-p2" shownumber="no">In short, my alternative ever returns, and is peremptory and decisive. 
If the mind and body are a whole made up of matter only, how comes it
to pass that this matter, which yesterday did not, has this day begun
to think?  Who is it that has bestowed upon it what it had not,
and which is without comparison more noble than thoughtless matter? 
What bestows thought upon it, has it not itself, and how can it give
what it has not?  Let us even suppose that thought should result
from a certain configuration, ranging, and degree of motion a certain
way, of all the parts of matter: what artificer has had the skill to
find out all those just, nice, and exact combinations, in order to make
a thinking machine?  If, on the contrary, the mind and body are
two distinct natures, what power superior to those two natures has been
able to unite and tie together without the mind’s assent, or so
much as its knowing which way that union was made?  Who is it that
with such absolute and supreme command over-rules both minds and bodies,
and keeps them in society and correspondence, and under a sort of incomprehensible
policy?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xlviii" next="xlix" prev="xlvii" title="SECT.  XLVI.  The Soul has an Absolute Command over the Body.">
<h3 id="xlviii-p0.1">SECT.  XLVI.  The Soul has an Absolute Command over the
Body.</h3>

<p id="xlviii-p1" shownumber="no">Be pleased to observe that the command of my mind over my body is
supreme and absolute in its bounded extent, since my single will, without
any effort or preparation, causes all the members of my body to move
on a sudden and immediately, according to the rules of mechanics. 
As the Scripture gives us the character of God, who said after the creation
of the universe, “Let there be light, and there was light”—in
like manner, the inward word of my soul alone, without any effort or
preparation, makes what it says.  I say, for instance, within myself,
through that inward, simple, and momentaneous word, “Let my body
move, and it moves.”  At the command of that simple and intimate
will, all the parts of my body are at work.  Immediately all nerves
are distended, all the springs hasten to concur together, and the whole
machine obeys, just as if every one of the most secret of those organs
heard a supreme and omnipotent voice.  This is certainly the most
simple and most effectual power that can be conceived.  All the
other beings within our knowledge afford not the like instance of it,
and this is precisely what men that are sensible and persuaded of a
Deity ascribe to it in all the universe.</p>
<p id="xlviii-p2" shownumber="no">Shall I ascribe it to my feeble mind, or rather to the power it has
over my body, which is so vastly different from it?  Shall I believe
that my will has that supreme command of its own nature, though in itself
so weak and imperfect?  But how comes it to pass that, among so
many bodies, it has that power over no more than one?  For no other
body moves according to its desires.  Now, who is it that gave
over one body the power it had over no other?  Will any man be
again so bold as to ascribe this to chance?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xlix" next="l" prev="xlviii" title="SECT.  XLVII.  The Power of the Soul over the Body is not only Supreme or Absolute, but Blind at the same time.">
<h3 id="xlix-p0.1">SECT.  XLVII.  The Power of the Soul over the Body is
not only Supreme or Absolute, but Blind at the same time.</h3>

<p id="xlix-p1" shownumber="no">But that power, which is so supreme and absolute, is blind at the
same time.  The most simple and ignorant peasant knows how to move
his body as well as a philosopher the most skilled in anatomy. 
The mind of a peasant commands his nerves, muscles, and tendons, which
he knows not, and which he never heard of.  He finds them without
knowing how to distinguish them, or knowing where they lie; he calls
precisely upon such as he has occasion for, nor does he mistake one
for the other.  If a rope-dancer, for instance, does but will,
the spirits instantly run with impetuousness, sometimes to certain nerves,
sometimes to others—all which distend or slacken in due time. 
Ask him which of them he set a-going, and which way he begun to move
them?  He will not so much as understand what you mean.  He
is an absolute stranger to what he has done in all the inward springs
of his machine.  The lute-player, who is perfectly well acquainted
with all the strings of his instrument, who sees them with his eyes,
and touches them one after another with his fingers, yet mistakes them
sometimes.  But the soul that governs the machine of man’s
body moves all its springs in time, without seeing or discerning them,
without being acquainted with their figure, situation, or strength,
and yet it never mistakes.  What prodigy is here!  My mind
commands what it knows not, and cannot see; what neither has, nor is
capable of any knowledge.  And yet it is infallibly obeyed. 
How much blindness and how much power at once is here!  The blindness
is man’s; but the power, whose is it?  To whom shall we ascribe
it, unless it be to Him who sees what man does not see, and performs
in him what passes his understanding?  It is to no purpose my mind
is willing to move the bodies that surround it, and which it knows very
distinctly; for none of them stirs, and it has not power to move the
least atom by its will.  There is but one single body, which some
superior Power must have made its property.  With respect to this
body, my mind is but willing, and all the springs of that machine, which
are unknown to it, move in time and in concert to obey him.  St.
Augustin, who made these reflections, has expressed them excellently
well.  “The inward parts of our bodies,” says he, “cannot
be living but by our souls; but our souls animate them far more easily
than they can know them. . . .  The soul knows not the body which
is subject to it. . . .  It does not know why it does not move
the nerves but when it pleases; and why, on the contrary, the pulsation
of veins goes on without interruption, whether the mind will or no. 
It knows not which is the first part of the body it moves immediately,
in order thereby to move all the rest. . . .  It does not know
why it feels in spite of itself, and moves the members only when it
pleases.  It is the mind does these things in the body.  But
how comes it to pass it neither knows what she does, nor in what manner
it performs it?  Those who learn, anatomy,” continues that
father, “are taught by others what passes within, and is performed
by themselves.  Why,” says he, “do I know, without
being taught, that there is in the sky, at a prodigious distance from
me, a sun and stars; and why have I occasion for a master to learn where
motion begins? . . .  When I move my finger, I know not how what
I perform within myself is performed.  We are too far above, and
cannot comprehend ourselves.”</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="l" next="li" prev="xlix" title="SECT.  XLVIII.  The Sovereignty of the Soul over the Body principally appears in the Images imprinted in the Brain.">
<h3 id="l-p0.1">SECT.  XLVIII.  The Sovereignty of the Soul over the Body
principally appears in the Images imprinted in the Brain.</h3>

<p id="l-p1" shownumber="no">It is certain we cannot sufficiently admire either the absolute power
of the soul over corporeal organs which she knows not, or the continual
use it makes of them without discerning them.  That sovereignty
principally appears with respect to the images imprinted in our brain. 
I know all the bodies of the universe that have made any impression
on my senses for a great many years past.  I have distinct images
of them that represent them to me, insomuch that I believe I see them
even when they exist no more.  My brain is like a closet full of
pictures, which should move and set themselves in order at the master’s
pleasure.  Painters, with all their art and skill, never attain
but an imperfect likeness; whereas the pictures I have in my head are
so faithful, that it is by consulting them I perceive all the defects
of those made by painters, and correct them within myself.  Now,
do these images, more like their original than the masterpieces of the
art of painting, imprint themselves in my head without any art? 
Is my brain a book, all the characters of which have ranged themselves
of their own accord?  If there be any art in the case, it does
not proceed from me.  For I find within me that collection of images
without having ever so much as thought either to imprint them, or set
them in order.  Moreover, all these images either appear or retire
as I please, without any confusion.  I call them back, and they
return; I dismiss them, and they sink I know not where.  They either
assemble or separate, as I please.  But I neither know where they
lie, nor what they are.  Nevertheless I find them always ready. 
The agitation of so many images, old and new, that revive, join, or
separate, never disturbs a certain order that is amongst them. 
If some of them do not appear at the first summons, at least I am certain
they are not far off.  They may lurk in some deep corner, but I
am not totally ignorant of them as I am of things I never knew; for,
on the contrary, I know confusedly what I look for.  If any other
image offers itself in the room of that I called for, I immediately
dismiss it, telling it, “It is not you I have occasion for.” 
But, then, where lie objects half-forgotten?  They are present
within me, since I look for them there, and find them at last. 
Again, in what manner are they there, since I look for them a long while
in vain?  What becomes of them?  “I am no more,”
says St. Augustin, “what I was when I had the thoughts I cannot
find again.  I know not,” continues that father, “either
how it comes to pass that I am thus withdrawn from and deprived of myself,
or how I am afterwards brought back and restored to myself.  I
am, as it were, another man, and carried to another place, when I look
for, and do not find, what I had trusted to my memory.  In such
a case we cannot reach, and are, in a manner, strangers remote from
ourselves.  Nor do we come at us but when we find what we are in
quest of.  But where is it we look for but within us?  Or
what is it we look for but ourselves? . . .  So unfathomable a
difficulty astonishes us!”  I distinctly remember I have
known what I do not know at present.  I remember my very oblivion. 
I call to mind the pictures or images of every person in every period
of life wherein I have seen them formerly, so that the same person passes
several times in my head.  At first, I see one a child, then a
young, and afterwards an old, man.  I place wrinkles in the same
face in which, on the other side, I see the tender graces of infancy. 
I join what subsists no more with what is still, without confounding
these extremes.  I preserve I know not what, which, by turns, is
all that I have seen since I came into the world.  Out of this
unknown store come all the perfumes, harmonies, tastes, degrees, and
mixtures of colours; in short, all the figures that have passed through
my senses, and which they have trusted to my brain.  I revive when
I please the joy I felt thirty years ago.  It returns; but sometimes
it is not the same it was formerly, and appears without rejoicing me. 
I remember I have been well pleased, and yet am not so while I have
that remembrance.  On the other hand, I renew past sorrows and
troubles.  They are present; for I distinctly perceive them such
as they were formerly, and not the least part of their bitterness and
lively sense escapes my memory.  But yet they are no more the same;
they are dulled, and neither trouble nor disquiet me.  I perceive
all their severity without feeling it; or, if I feel it, it is only
by representation, which turns a former smart and racking pain into
a kind of sport and diversion, for the image of past sorrows rejoices
me.  It is the same with pleasures: a virtuous mind is afflicted
by the memory of its disorderly unlawful enjoyments.  They are
present, for they appear with all their softest and most flattering
attendants; but they are no more themselves, and such joys return only
to make us uneasy.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="li" next="lii" prev="l" title="SECT.  XLIX.  Two Wonders of the Memory and Brain.">
<h3 id="li-p0.1">SECT.  XLIX.  Two Wonders of the Memory and Brain.</h3>

<p id="li-p1" shownumber="no">Here, therefore, are two wonders equally incomprehensible. 
The first, that my brain is a kind of book, that contains a number almost
infinite of images, and characters ranged in an order I did not contrive,
and of which chance could not be the author.  For I never had the
least thought either of writing anything in my brain, or to place in
any order the images and characters I imprinted in it.  I had no
other thought but only to see the objects that struck my senses. 
Neither could chance make so marvellous a book: even all the art of
man is too imperfect ever to reach so high a perfection, therefore what
hand had the skill to compose it?</p>
<p id="li-p2" shownumber="no">The second wonder I find in my brain, is to see that my mind reads
with so much ease, whatever it pleases, in that inward book; and read
even characters it does not know.  I never saw the traces or figures
imprinted in my brain, and even the substance of my brain itself, which
is like the paper of that book, is altogether unknown to me.  All
those numberless characters transpose themselves, and afterwards resume
their rank and place to obey my command.  I have, as it were, a
divine power over a work I am unacquainted with, and which is incapable
of knowledge.  That which understands nothing, understands my thought
and performs it instantly.  The thought of man has no power over
bodies: I am sensible of it by running over all nature.  There
is but one single body which my bare will moves, as if it were a deity;
and even moves the most subtle and nicest springs of it, without knowing
them.  Now, who is it that united my will to this body, and gave
it so much power over it?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lii" next="liii" prev="li" title="SECT.  L.  The Mind of Man is mixed with Greatness and Weakness.  Its Greatness consists in two things.  First, the Mind has the Idea of the Infinite.">
<h3 id="lii-p0.1">SECT.  L.  The Mind of Man is mixed with Greatness and
Weakness.  Its Greatness consists in two things.  First, the
Mind has the Idea of the Infinite.</h3>

<p id="lii-p1" shownumber="no">Let us conclude these observations by a short reflection on the essence
of our mind; in which I find an incomprehensible mixture of greatness
and weakness.  Its greatness is real: for it brings together the
past and the present, without confusion; and by its reasoning penetrates
into futurity.  It has the idea both of bodies and spirits. 
Nay, it has the idea of the infinite: for it supposes and affirms all
that belongs to it, and rejects and denies all that is not proper to
it.  If you say that the infinite is triangular, the mind will
answer without hesitation, that what has no bounds can have no figure. 
If you desire it to assign the first of the units that make up an infinite
number, it will readily answer, that there can be no beginning, end,
or number in the infinite; because if one could find either a first
or last unit in it, one might add some other unit to that, and consequently
increase the number.  Now a number cannot be infinite, when it
is capable of some addition, and when a limit may be assigned to it,
on the side where it may receive an increase.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="liii" next="liv" prev="lii" title="SECT.  LI.  The Mind knows the Finite only by the Idea of the Infinite.">
<h3 id="liii-p0.1">SECT.  LI.  The Mind knows the Finite only by the Idea
of the Infinite.</h3>

<p id="liii-p1" shownumber="no">It is even in the infinite that my mind knows the finite.  When
we say a man is sick, we mean a man that has no health; and when we
call a man weak, we mean one that has no strength.  We know sickness,
which is a privation of health, no other way but by representing to
us health itself as a real good, of which such a man is deprived; and,
in like manner, we only know weakness, by representing to us strength
as a real advantage, which such a man is not master of.  We know
darkness, which is nothing real, only by denying, and consequently by
conceiving daylight, which is most real, and most positive.  In
like manner we know the finite only by assigning it a bound, which is
a mere negation of a greater extent; and consequently only the privation
of the infinite.  Now a man could never represent to himself the
privation of the infinite, unless he conceived the infinite itself:
just as he could not have a notion of sickness, unless he had an idea
of health, of which it is only a privation.  Now, whence comes
that idea of the infinite in us?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="liv" next="lv" prev="liii" title="SECT.  LII.  Secondly, the Ideas of the Mind are Universal, Eternal, and Immutable.">
<h3 id="liv-p0.1">SECT.  LII.  Secondly, the Ideas of the Mind are Universal,
Eternal, and Immutable.</h3>

<p id="liv-p1" shownumber="no">Oh! how great is the mind of man!  He carries within him wherewithal
to astonish, and infinitely to surpass himself: since his ideas are
universal, eternal, and immutable.  They are universal: for when
I say it is impossible to be and not to be; the whole is bigger than
a part of it; a line perfectly circular has no straight parts; between
two points given the straight line is the shortest; the centre of a
perfect circle is equally distant from all the points of the circumference;
an equilateral triangle has no obtuse or right angle: all these truths
admit of no exception.  There never can be any being, line, circle,
or triangle, but according to these rules.  These axioms are of
all times, or to speak more properly, they exist before all time, and
will ever remain after any comprehensible duration.  Let the universe
be turned topsy-turvy, destroyed, and annihilated; and even let there
be no mind to reason about beings, lines, circles, and triangles: yet
it will ever be equally true in itself, that the same thing cannot at
once be and not be; that a perfect circle can have no part of a straight
line; that the centre of a perfect circle cannot be nearer one side
of the circumference than the other.  Men may, indeed, not think
actually on these truths: and it might even happen that there should
be neither universe nor any mind capable to reflect on these truths:
but nevertheless they are still constant and certain in themselves although
no mind should be acquainted with them; just as the rays of the sun
would not cease being real, although all men should be blind, and no
body have eyes to be sensible of their light.  By affirming that
two and two make four, says St. Augustin, man is not only certain that
he speaks truth, but he cannot doubt that such a proposition was ever
equally true, and must be so eternally.  These ideas we carry within
ourselves have no bounds, and cannot admit of any.  It cannot be
said that what I have affirmed about the centre of perfect circles is
true only in relation to a certain number of circles; for that proposition
is true, through evident necessity, with respect to all circles <span class="ital" id="liv-p1.1">ad
infinitum</span>.  These unbounded ideas can never be changed, altered,
impaired, or defaced in us; for they make up the very essence of our
reason.  Whatever effort a man may make in his own mind, yet it
is impossible for him ever to entertain a serious doubt about the truths
which those ideas clearly represent to us.  For instance, I never
can seriously call in question, whether the whole is bigger than one
of its parts; or whether the centre of a perfect circle is equally distant
from all the points of the circumference.  The idea of the infinite
is in me like that of numbers, lines, circles, a whole, and a part. 
The changing our ideas would be, in effect, the annihilating reason
itself.  Let us judge and make an estimate of our greatness by
the immutable infinite stamp within us, and which can never be defaced
from our minds.  But lest such a real greatness should dazzle and
betray us, by flattering our vanity, let us hasten to cast our eyes
on our weakness.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lv" next="lvi" prev="liv" title="SECT.  LIII.  Weakness of Man’s Mind.">
<h3 id="lv-p0.1">SECT.  LIII.  Weakness of Man’s Mind.</h3>

<p id="lv-p1" shownumber="no">That same mind that incessantly sees the infinite, and, through the
rule of the infinite, all finite things, is likewise infinitely ignorant
of all the objects that surround it.  It is altogether ignorant
of itself, and gropes about in an abyss of darkness.  It neither
knows what it is, nor how it is united with a body; nor which way it
has so much command over all the springs of that body, which it knows
not.  It is ignorant of its own thoughts and wills.  It knows
not, with certainty, either what it believes or wills.  It often
fancies to believe and will, what it neither believes nor wills. 
It is liable to mistake, and its greatest excellence is to acknowledge
it.  To the error of its thoughts, it adds the disorder and irregularity
of its will and desires; so that it is forced to groan in the consciousness
and experience of its corruption.  Such is the mind of man, weak,
uncertain, stinted, full of errors.  Now, who is it that put the
idea of the infinite, that is to say of perfection, in a subject so
stinted and so full of imperfection?  Did it give itself so sublime,
and so pure an idea, which is itself a kind of infinite in imagery? 
What finite being distinct from it was able to give it what bears no
proportion with what is limited within any bounds?  Let us suppose
the mind of man to be like a looking-glass, wherein the images of all
the neighbouring bodies imprint themselves.  Now what being was
able to stamp within us the image of the infinite, if the infinite never
existed?  Who can put in a looking-glass the image of a chimerical
object which is not in being, and which was never placed against the
glass?  This image of the infinite is not a confused collection
of finite objects, which the mind may mistake for a true infinite. 
It is the true infinite of which we have the thought and idea. 
We know it so well, that we exactly distinguish it from whatever it
is not; and that no subtilty can palm upon us any other object in its
room.  We are so well acquainted with it, that we reject from it
any propriety that denotes the least bound or limit.  In short,
we know it so well, that it is in it alone we know all the rest, just
as we know the night by the day, sickness by health.  Now, once
more, whence comes so great an image?  Does it proceed from nothing? 
Can a stinted limited being imagine and invent the infinite, if there
be no infinite at all?  Our weak and short-sighted mind cannot
of itself form that image, which, at this rate, should have no author. 
None of the outward objects can give us that image: for they can only
give us the image of what they are, and they are limited and imperfect. 
Therefore, from whence shall we derive that distinct image which is
unlike anything within us, and all we know here below, without us? 
Whence does it proceed?  Where is that infinite we cannot comprehend,
because it is really infinite: and which nevertheless we cannot mistake,
because we distinguish it from anything that is inferior to it? 
Sure it must be somewhere, otherwise how could it imprint itself in
our minds?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lvi" next="lvii" prev="lv" title="SECT.  LIV.  The Ideas of Man are the Immutable Rules of his Judgment.">
<h3 id="lvi-p0.1">SECT.  LIV.  The Ideas of Man are the Immutable Rules
of his Judgment.</h3>

<p id="lvi-p1" shownumber="no">But besides the idea of the infinite, I have yet universal and immutable
notions, which are the rule and standard of all my judgments; insomuch
that I cannot judge of anything but by consulting them; nor am I free
to judge contrary to what they represent to me.  My thoughts are
so far from being able to correct or form that rule, that they are themselves
corrected, in spite of myself, by that superior rule; and invincibly
subjected to its decision.  Whatever effort my mind can make, I
can never be brought, as I observed before, to entertain a doubt whether
two and two make four; whether the whole is bigger than one of its parts;
or whether the centre of a perfect circle be equally distant from all
the points of the circumference.  I am not free to deny those propositions;
and if I happen to deny those truths, or others much like them, there
is in me something above myself, which forces me to return to the rule. 
That fixed and immutable rule is so inward and intimate, that I am tempted
to take it for myself.  But it is above me, since it corrects and
rectifies me; gives me a distrust of myself, and makes me sensible of
my impotency.  It is something that inspires me every moment, provided
I hearken to it, and I never err or mistake except when I am not attentive
to it.  What inspires me would for ever preserve me from error,
if I were docile, and acted without precipitation; for that inward inspiration
would teach me to judge aright of things within my reach, and about
which I have occasion to form a judgment.  As for others, it would
teach me not to judge of them at all, which second lesson is no less
important than the first.  That inward rule is what I call my reason;
but I speak of my reason without penetrating into the extent of those
words, as I speak of nature and instinct, without knowing what those
expressions mean.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lvii" next="lviii" prev="lvi" title="SECT.  LV.  What Man’s Reason is.">
<h3 id="lvii-p0.1">SECT.  LV.  What Man’s Reason is.</h3>

<p id="lvii-p1" shownumber="no">It is certain my reason is within me, for I must continually recollect
myself to find it; but the superior reason that corrects me upon occasion,
and which I consult, is none of mine, nor is it part of myself. 
That rule is perfect and immutable; whereas I am changeable and imperfect. 
When I err, it preserves its rectitude.  When I am undeceived,
it is not set right, for it never was otherwise; and still keeping to
truth has the authority to call, and bring me back to it.  It is
an inward master that makes me either be silent or speak; believe, or
doubt; acknowledge my errors, or confirm my judgment.  I am instructed
by hearkening to it; whereas I err and go astray when I hearken to myself. 
That Master is everywhere, and His voice is heard, from one end of the
universe to the other, by all men as well as me.  Whilst He corrects
and rectifies me in France, He corrects and sets right other men in
China, Japan, Mexico, and in Peru, by the same principles.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lviii" next="lix" prev="lvii" title="SECT.  LVI.  Reason is the Same in all Men, of all Ages and Countries.">
<h3 id="lviii-p0.1">SECT.  LVI.  Reason is the Same in all Men, of all Ages
and Countries.</h3>

<p id="lviii-p1" shownumber="no">Two men who never saw or heard of one another, and who never entertained
any correspondence with any other man that could give them common notions,
yet speak at two extremities of the earth, about a certain number of
truths, as if they were in concert.  It is infallibly known beforehand
in one hemisphere, what will be answered in the other upon these truths. 
Men of all countries and of all ages, whatever their education may have
been, find themselves invincibly subjected and obliged to think and
speak in the same manner.  The Master who incessantly teaches us
makes all of us think the same way.  Whenever we hastily judge,
without hearkening to His voice, in diffidence of ourselves, we think
and utter dreams full of extravagance.  Thus what appears most
to be part of ourselves, and our very essence, I mean our reason, is
least our own, and what, on the contrary, ought to be accounted most
borrowed.  We continually receive a reason superior to us, as we
incessantly breathe the air, which is a foreign body; or as we incessantly
see all the objects near us by the light of the sun, whose rays are
bodies foreign to our eyes.  That superior reason over-rules and
governs, to a certain degree, with an absolute power all men, even the
least rational, and makes them all ever agree, in spite of themselves,
upon those points.  It is she that makes a savage in Canada think
about a great many things, just as the Greek and Roman philosophers
did.  It is she that made the Chinese geometricians find out much
of the same truths with the Europeans, whilst those nations so very
remote were unknown one to another.  It is she that makes people
in Japan conclude, as in France, that two and two make four; nor is
it apprehended that any nation shall ever change their opinion about
it.  It is she that makes men think nowadays about certain points,
just as men thought about the same four thousand years ago.  It
is she that gives uniform thoughts to the most jealous and jarring men,
and the most irreconcilable among themselves.  It is by her that
men of all ages and countries are, as it were, chained about an immovable
centre, and held in the bonds of amity by certain invariable rules,
called first principles, notwithstanding the infinite variations of
opinions that arise in them from their passion, avocations, and caprices,
which over-rule all their other less-clear judgments.  It is through
her that men, as depraved as they are, have not yet presumed openly
to bestow on vice the name of virtue, and that they are reduced to dissemble
being just, sincere, moderate, benevolent, in order to gain one another’s
esteem.  The most wicked and abandoned of men cannot be brought
to esteem what they wish they could esteem, or to despise what they
wish they could despise.  It is not possible to force the eternal
barrier of truth and justice.  The inward master, called reason,
intimately checks the attempt with absolute power, and knows how to
set bounds to the most impudent folly of men.  Though vice has
for many ages reigned with unbridled licentiousness, virtue is still
called virtue; and the most brutish and rash of her adversaries cannot
yet deprive her of her name.  Hence it is that vice, though triumphant
in the world, is still obliged to disguise itself under the mask of
hypocrisy or sham honesty, to gain the esteem it has not the confidence
to expect, if it should go bare-faced.  Thus, notwithstanding its
impudence, it pays a forced homage to virtue, by endeavouring to adorn
itself with her fairest outside in order to receive the honour and respect
she commands from men.  It is true virtuous men are exposed to
censure; and they are, indeed, ever reprehensible in this life, through
their natural imperfections; but yet the most vicious cannot totally
efface in themselves the idea of true virtue.  There never was
yet any man upon earth that could prevail either with others, or himself,
to allow, as a received maxim, that to be knavish, passionate, and mischievous,
is more honourable than to be honest, moderate, good-natured, and benevolent.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lix" next="lx" prev="lviii" title="SECT.  LVII.  Reason in Man is Independent of and above Him.">
<h3 id="lix-p0.1">SECT.  LVII.  Reason in Man is Independent of and above
Him.</h3>

<p id="lix-p1" shownumber="no">I have already evinced that the inward and universal master, at all
times, and in all places, speaks the same truths.  We are not that
master: though it is true we often speak without, and higher than him. 
But then we mistake, stutter, and do not so much as understand ourselves. 
We are even afraid of being made sensible of our mistakes, and we shut
up our ears, lest we should be humbled by his corrections.  Certainly
the man who is apprehensive of being corrected and reproved by that
uncorruptible reason, and ever goes astray when he does not follow it,
is not that perfect, universal, and immutable reason, that corrects
him, in spite of himself.  In all things we find, as it were, two
principles within us.  The one gives, the other receives; the one
fails, or is defective; the other makes up; the one mistakes, the other
rectifies; the one goes awry, through his inclination, the other sets
him right.  It was the mistaken and ill-understood experience of
this that led the Marcionites and Manicheans into error.  Every
man is conscious within himself of a limited and inferior reason, that
goes astray and errs, as soon as it gets loose from an entire subordination,
and which mends its error no other way, but by returning under the yoke
of another superior, universal, and immutable reason.  Thus everything
within us argues an inferior, limited, communicated, and borrowed reason,
that wants every moment to be rectified by another.  All men are
rational by means of the same reason, that communicates itself to them,
according to various degrees.  There is a certain number of wise
men; but the wisdom from which they draw theirs, as from an inexhaustible
source, and which makes them what they are, is but ONE.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lx" next="lxi" prev="lix" title="SECT.  LVIII.  It is the Primitive Truth, that Lights all Minds, by communicating itself to them.">
<h3 id="lx-p0.1">SECT.  LVIII.  It is the Primitive Truth, that Lights
all Minds, by communicating itself to them.</h3>

<p id="lx-p1" shownumber="no">Where is that wisdom?  Where is that reason, at once both common
and superior to all limited and imperfect reasons of mankind? 
Where is that oracle, which is never silent, and against which all the
vain prejudices of men cannot prevail?  Where is that reason which
we have ever occasion to consult, and which prevents us to create in
us the desire of hearing its voice?  Where is that lively light
which lighteth every man that cometh into the world?  Where is
that pure and soft light, which not only lights those eyes that are
open, but which opens eyes that are shut; cures sore eyes; gives eyes
to those that have none to see it; in short, which raises the desire
of being lighted by it, and gains even their love, who were afraid to
see it?  Every eye sees it; nor would it see anything, unless it
saw it; since it is by that light and its pure rays that the eye sees
everything.  As the sensibler sun in the firmament lights all bodies,
so the sun of intelligence lights all minds.  The substance of
a man’s eye is not the light: on the contrary, the eye borrows,
every moment, the light from the rays of the sun.  Just in the
same manner, my mind is not the primitive reason, or universal and immutable
truth; but only the organ through which that original light passes,
and which is lighted by it.  There is a sun of spirits that lights
them far better than the visible sun lights bodies.  This sun of
spirits gives us, at once, both its light, and the love of it, in order
to seek it.  That sun of truth leaves no manner of darkness, and
shines at the same time in the two hemispheres.  It lights us as
much by night as by day; nor does it spread its rays outwardly; but
inhabits in every one of us.  A man can never deprive another man
of its beams.  One sees it equally, in whatever corner of the universe
he may lurk.  A man never needs say to another, step aside, to
let me see that sun; you rob me of its rays; you take away my share
of it.  That sun never sets: nor suffers any cloud, but such as
are raised by our passions.  It is a day without shadow. 
It lights the savages even in the deepest and darkest caves; none but
sore eyes wink against its light; nor is there indeed any man so distempered
and so blind, but who still walks by the glimpse of some duskish light
he retains from that inward sun of consciences.  That universal
light discovers and represents all objects to our minds; nor can we
judge of anything but by it; just as we cannot discern anybody but by
the rays of the sun.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxi" next="lxii" prev="lx" title="SECT.  LIX.  It is by the Light of Primitive Truth a Man Judges whether what one says to him be True or False.">
<h3 id="lxi-p0.1">SECT.  LIX.  It is by the Light of Primitive Truth a Man
Judges whether what one says to him be True or False.</h3>

<p id="lxi-p1" shownumber="no">Men may speak and discourse to us in order to instruct us: but we
cannot believe them any farther, than we find a certain conformity or
agreement between what they say, and what the inward master says. 
After they have exhausted all their arguments, we must still return,
and hearken to him, for a final decision.  If a man should tell
us that a part equals the whole of which it is a part, we should not
be able to forbear laughing, and instead of persuading us, he would
make himself ridiculous to us.  It is in the very bottom of ourselves,
by consulting the inward master, that we must find the truths that are
taught us, that is, which are outwardly proposed to us.  Thus,
properly speaking, there is but one true Master, who teaches all, and
without whom one learns nothing.  Other masters always refer and
bring us back to that inward school where he alone speaks.  It
is there we receive what we have not; it is there we learn what we were
ignorant of; and find what we had lost by oblivion.  It is in the
intimate bottom of ourselves, he keeps in store for us certain truths,
that lie, as it were, buried, but which revive upon occasion; and it
is there, in short, that we reject the falsehood we had embraced. 
Far from judging that master, it is by him alone we are judged peremptorily
in all things.  He is a judge disinterested, impartial, and superior
to us.  We may, indeed, refuse hearing him, and raise a din to
stun our ears: but when we hear him it is not in our power to contradict
him.  Nothing is more unlike man than that invisible master that
instructs and judges him with so much severity, uprightness, and perfection. 
Thus our limited, uncertain, defective, fallible reason, is but a feeble
and momentaneous inspiration of a primitive, supreme, and immutable
reason, which communicates itself with measure, to all intelligent beings.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxii" next="lxiii" prev="lxi" title="SECT.  LX.  The Superior Reason that resides in Man is God Himself; and whatever has been above discovered to be in Man, are evident Footsteps of the Deity.">
<h3 id="lxii-p0.1">SECT.  LX.  The Superior Reason that resides in Man is
God Himself; and whatever has been above discovered to be in Man, are
evident Footsteps of the Deity.</h3>

<p id="lxii-p1" shownumber="no">It cannot be said that man gives himself the thoughts he had not
before; much less can it be said that he receives them from other men,
since it is certain he neither does nor can admit anything from without,
unless he finds it in his own bottom, by consulting within him the principles
of reason, in order to examine whether what he is told is agreeable
or repugnant to them.  Therefore there is an inward school wherein
man receives what he neither can give himself, nor expect from other
men who live upon trust as well as himself.  Here then, are two
reasons I find within me; one of which, is myself, the other is above
me.  That which is myself is very imperfect, prejudiced, liable
to error, changeable, headstrong, ignorant, and limited; in short it
possesses nothing but what is borrowed.  The other is common to
all men, and superior to them.  It is perfect, eternal, immutable,
ever ready to communicate itself in all places, and to rectify all minds
that err and mistake; in short, incapable of ever being either exhausted
or divided, although it communicates itself to all who desire it. 
Where is that perfect reason which is so near me, and yet so different
from me?  Where is it?  Sure it must be something real; for
nothing or nought cannot either be perfect or make perfect imperfect
natures.  Where is that supreme reason?  Is it not the very
God I look for?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxiii" next="lxiv" prev="lxii" title="SECT.  LXI.  New sensible Notices of the Deity in Man, drawn from the Knowledge he has of Unity.">
<h3 id="lxiii-p0.1">SECT.  LXI.  New sensible Notices of the Deity in Man,
drawn from the Knowledge he has of Unity.</h3>

<p id="lxiii-p1" shownumber="no">I still find other traces or notices of the Deity within me: here
is a very sensible one.  I am acquainted with prodigious numbers
with the relations that are between them.  Now how come I by that
knowledge?  It is so very distinct that I cannot seriously doubt
of it; and so, immediately, without the least hesitation, I rectify
any man that does not follow it in computation.  If a man says
seventeen and three make twenty-two, I presently tell him seventeen
and three make but twenty; and he is immediately convinced by his own
light, and acquiesces in my correction.  The same Master who speaks
within me to correct him speaks at the same time within him to bid him
acquiesce.  These are not two masters that have agreed to make
us agree.  It is something indivisible, eternal, immutable, that
speaks at the same time with an invincible persuasion in us both. 
Once more, how come I by so just a notion of numbers?  All numbers
are but repeated units.  Every number is but a compound, or a repetition
of units.  The number of two, for instance, is but two units; the
number of four is reducible to one repeated four times.  Therefore
we cannot conceive any number without conceiving unity, which is the
essential foundation of any possible number; nor can we conceive any
repetition of units without conceiving unity itself, which is its basis.</p>
<p id="lxiii-p2" shownumber="no">But which way can I know any real unit?  I never saw, nor so
much as imagined any by the report of my senses.  Let me take,
for instance, the most subtle atom; it must have a figure, length, breadth,
and depth, a top and a bottom, a left and a right side; and again the
top is not the bottom, nor one side the other.  Therefore this
atom is not truly one, for it consists of parts.  Now a compound
is a real number, and a multitude of beings.  It is not a real
unit, but a collection of beings, one of which is not the other. 
I therefore never learnt by my eyes, my ears, my hands, nor even by
my imagination, that there is in nature any real unity; on the contrary,
neither my senses nor my imagination ever presented to me anything but
what is a compound, a real number or a multitude.  All unity continually
escapes me; it flies me as it were by a kind of enchantment.  Since
I look for it in so many divisions of an atom, I certainly have a distinct
idea of it; and it is only by its simple and clear idea that I arrive,
by the repetition of it, at the knowledge of so many other numbers. 
But since it escapes me in all the divisions of the bodies of nature,
it clearly follows that I never came by the knowledge of it, through
the canal of my senses and imagination.  Here therefore is an idea
which is in me independently from the senses, imagination, and impressions
of bodies.</p>
<p id="lxiii-p3" shownumber="no">Moreover, although I would not frankly acknowledge that I have a
clear idea of unity, which is the foundation of all numbers, because
they are but repetitions or collections of units: I must at least be
forced to own that I know a great many numbers with their proprieties
and relations.  I know, for instance, how much make 900,000,000
joined with 800,000,000 of another sum.  I make no mistake in it;
and I should, with certainty, immediately rectify any man that should. 
Nevertheless, neither my senses nor my imagination were ever able to
represent to me distinctly all those millions put together.  Nor
would the image they should represent to me be more like seventeen hundred
millions than a far inferior number.  Therefore, how came I by
so distinct an idea of numbers, which I never could either feel or imagine? 
These ideas, independent upon bodies, can neither be corporeal nor admitted
in a corporeal subject.  They discover to me the nature of my soul,
which admits what is incorporeal and receives it within itself in an
incorporeal manner.  Now, how came I by so incorporeal an idea
of bodies themselves?  I cannot by my own nature carry it within
me, since what in me knows bodies is incorporeal; and since it knows
them, without receiving that knowledge through the canal of corporeal
organs, such as the senses and imagination.  What thinks in me
must be, as it were, a nothing of corporeal nature.  How was I
able to know beings that have by nature no relation with my thinking
being?  Certainly a being superior to those two natures, so very
different, and which comprehends them both in its infinity, must have
joined them in my soul, and given me an idea of a nature entirely different
from that which thinks in me.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxiv" next="lxv" prev="lxiii" title="SECT.  LXII.  The Idea of the Unity proves that there are Immaterial Substances; and that there is a Being Perfectly One, who is God.">
<h3 id="lxiv-p0.1">SECT.  LXII.  The Idea of the Unity proves that there
are Immaterial Substances; and that there is a Being Perfectly One,
who is God.</h3>

<p id="lxiv-p1" shownumber="no">As for units, some perhaps will say that I do not know them by the
bodies, but only by the spirits; and, therefore, that my mind being
one, and truly known to me, it is by it, and not by the bodies, I have
the idea of unity.  But to this I answer.</p>
<p id="lxiv-p2" shownumber="no">It will, at least, follow from thence that I know substances that
have no manner of extension or divisibility, and which are present. 
Here are already beings purely incorporeal, in the number of which I
ought to place my soul.  Now, who is it that has united it to my
body?  This soul of mine is not an infinite being; it has not been
always, and it thinks within certain bounds.  Now, again, who makes
it know bodies so different from it?  Who gives it so great a command
over a certain body; and who gives reciprocally to that body so great
a command over the soul?  Moreover, which way do I know whether
this thinking soul is really one, or whether it has parts?  I do
not see this soul.  Now, will anybody say that it is in so invisible,
and so impenetrable, a thing that I clearly see what unity is? 
I am so far from learning by my soul what the being One is, that, on
the contrary, it is by the clear idea I have already of unity that I
examine whether my soul be one or divisible.</p>
<p id="lxiv-p3" shownumber="no">Add to this, that I have within me a clear idea of a perfect unity,
which is far above that I may find in my soul.  The latter is often
conscious that she is divided between two contrary opinions, inclinations,
and habits.  Now, does not this division, which I find within myself,
show and denote a kind of multiplicity and composition of parts? 
Besides, the soul has, at least, a successive composition of thoughts,
one of which is most different and distinct from another.  I conceive
an unity infinitely more One, if I may so speak.  I conceive a
Being who never changes His thoughts, who always thinks all things at
once, and in which no composition, even successive, can be found. 
Undoubtedly it is the idea of the perfect and supreme unity that makes
me so inquisitive after some unity in spirits, and even in bodies. 
This idea, ever present within me, is innate or inborn with me; it is
the perfect model by which I seek everywhere some imperfect copy of
the unity.  This idea of what is one, simple, and indivisible by
excellence can be no other than the idea of God.  I, therefore,
know God with such clearness and evidence, that it is by knowing Him
I seek in all creatures, and in myself, some image and likeness of His
unity.  The bodies have, as it were, some mark or print of that
unity, which still flies away in the division of its parts; and the
spirits have a greater likeness of it, although they have a successive
composition of thoughts.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxv" next="lxvi" prev="lxiv" title="SECT.  LXIII.  Dependence and Independence of Man.  His Dependence Proves the Existence of his Creator.">
<h3 id="lxv-p0.1">SECT.  LXIII.  Dependence and Independence of Man. 
His Dependence Proves the Existence of his Creator.</h3>

<p id="lxv-p1" shownumber="no">But here is another mystery which I carry within me, and which makes
me incomprehensible to my self, viz.: that on the one hand I am free,
and on the other dependent.  Let us examine these two things, and
see whether it is possible to reconcile them.</p>
<p id="lxv-p2" shownumber="no">I am a dependent being.  Independency is the supreme perfection. 
To be by one’s self is to carry within one’s self the source
or spring of one’s own being; or, which is the same, it is to
borrow nothing from any being different from one’s self. 
Suppose a being that has all the perfections you can imagine, but which
has a borrowed and dependent being, and you will find him to be less
perfect than another being in which you would suppose but bare independency. 
For there is no comparison to be made between a being that exists by
himself and a being who has nothing of his own—nothing but what
is precarious and borrowed—and is in himself, as it were, only
upon trust.</p>
<p id="lxv-p3" shownumber="no">This consideration brings me to acknowledge the imperfection of what
I call my soul.  If she existed by herself, it would borrow nothing
from another; she would not want either to be instructed in her ignorances,
or to be rectified in her errors.  Nothing could reclaim her from
her vices, or inspire her with virtue; for nothing would be able to
render her will better than it should have been at first.  This
soul would ever possess whatever she should be capable to enjoy, nor
could she ever receive any addition from without.  On the other
hand, it is no less certain that she could not lose anything, for what
is or exists by itself is always necessarily whatever it is.  Therefore
my soul could not fall into ignorance, error, or vice, or suffer any
diminution of good-will; nor could she, on the other hand, instruct
or correct herself, or become better than she is.  Now, I experience
the contrary of all these; for I forget, mistake, err, go astray, lose
the sight of truth and the love of virtue, I corrupt, I diminish. 
On the other hand, I improve and increase by acquiring wisdom and good-will,
which I never had.  This intimate experience convinces me that
my soul is not a being existing by itself and independent; that is necessary,
and immutable in all it possesses and enjoys.  Now, whence proceeds
this augmentation and improvement of myself?  Who is it that can
enlarge and perfect my being by making me better, and, consequently,
greater than I was?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxvi" next="lxvii" prev="lxv" title="SECT.  LXIV.  Good Will cannot Proceed but from a Superior Being.">
<h3 id="lxvi-p0.1">SECT.  LXIV.  Good Will cannot Proceed but from a Superior
Being.</h3>

<p id="lxvi-p1" shownumber="no">The will or faculty of willing is undoubtedly a degree of being,
and of good, or perfection; but good-will, benevolence, or desire of
good, is another degree of superior good.  For one may misuse will
in order to wish ill, cheat, hurt, or do injustice; whereas good-will
is the good or right use of will itself, which cannot but be good. 
Good-will is therefore what is most precious in man.  It is that
which sets a value upon all the rest.  It is, as it were, “The
whole man:” <span class="ital" id="lxvi-p1.1">Hoc enim omnis homo.</span></p>
<p id="lxvi-p2" shownumber="no">I have already shown that my will is not by itself, since it is liable
to lose and receive degrees of good or perfection; and likewise that
it is a good inferior to good-will, because it is better to will good
than barely to have a will susceptible both of good and evil. 
How could I be brought to believe that I, a weak, imperfect, borrowed,
precarious, and dependent being, bestow on myself the highest degree
of perfection, while it is visible and evident that I derive the far
inferior degree of perfection from a First Being?  Can I imagine
that God gives me the lesser good, and that I give myself the greater
without Him?  How should I come by that high degree of perfection
in order to give it myself!  Should I have it from nothing, which
is all my own stock?  Shall I say that other spirits, much like
or equal to mine, give it me?  But since those limited and dependent
beings like myself cannot give themselves anything no more than I can,
much less can they bestow anything upon another.  For as they do
not exist by themselves, so they have not by themselves any true power,
either over me, or over things that are imperfect in me, or over themselves. 
Wherefore, without stopping with them, we must go up higher in order
to find out a first, teeming, and most powerful cause, that is able
to bestow on my soul the good will she has not.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxvii" next="lxviii" prev="lxvi" title="SECT.  LXV.  As a Superior Being is the Cause of All the Modifications of Creatures, so it is Impossible for Man’s Will to Will Good by Itself or of its own Accord.">
<h3 id="lxvii-p0.1">SECT.  LXV.  As a Superior Being is the Cause of All the
Modifications of Creatures, so it is Impossible for Man’s Will
to Will Good by Itself or of its own Accord.</h3>

<p id="lxvii-p1" shownumber="no">Let us still add another reflection.  That First Being is the
cause of all the modifications of His creatures.  The operation
follows the Being, as the philosophers are used to speak.  A being
that is dependent in the essence of his being cannot but be dependent
in all his operations, for the accessory follows the principal. 
Therefore, the Author of the essence of the being is also the Author
of all the modifications or modes of being of creatures.  Thus
God is the real and immediate cause of all the configurations, combinations,
and motions of all the bodies of the universe.  It is by means
or upon occasion of a body He has set in motion that He moves another. 
It is He who created everything and who does everything in His creatures
or works.  Now, volition is the modification of the will or willing
faculty of the soul, just as motion is the modification of bodies. 
Shall we affirm that God is the real, immediate, and total cause of
the motion of all bodies, and that He is not equally the real and immediate
cause of the good-will of men’s wills?  Will this modification,
the most excellent of all, be the only one not made by God in His own
work, and which the work bestows on itself independently?  Who
can entertain such a thought?  Therefore my good-will which I had
not yesterday and which I have to-day is not a thing I bestow upon myself,
but must come from Him who gave me both the will and the being.</p>
<p id="lxvii-p2" shownumber="no">As to will is a greater perfection than barely to be, so to will
good is more perfect than to will.  The step from power to a virtuous
act is the greatest perfection in man.  Power is only a balance
or poise between virtue and vice, or a suspension between good and evil. 
The passage or step to the act is a decision or determination for the
good, and consequent by the superior good.  The power susceptible
of good and evil comes from God, which we have fully evinced. 
Now, shall we affirm that the decisive stroke that determines to the
greater good either is not at all, or is less owing to Him?  All
this evidently proves what the Apostle says, viz., that God “works
both to will and to do of His good pleasure.”  Here is man’s
dependence; let us look for his liberty.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxviii" next="lxix" prev="lxvii" title="SECT.  LXVI.  Of Man’s Liberty.">
<h3 id="lxviii-p0.1">SECT.  LXVI.  Of Man’s Liberty.</h3>

<p id="lxviii-p1" shownumber="no">I am free, nor can I doubt of it.  I am intimately and invincibly
convinced that I can either will or not will, and that there is in me
a choice not only between willing and not willing, but also between
divers wills about the variety of objects that present themselves. 
I am sensible, as the Scripture says, that I “am in the hands
of my Council,” which alone suffices to show me that my soul is
not corporeal.  All that is body or corporeal does not in the least
determine itself, and is, on the contrary, determined in all things
by laws called physical, which are necessary, invincible, and contrary
to what I call liberty.  From thence I infer that my soul is of
a nature entirely different from that of my body.  Now who is it
that was able to join by a reciprocal union two such different natures,
and hold them in so just a concert for all their respective operations? 
That tie, as we observed before, cannot be formed but by a Superior
Being, who comprehends and unites those two sorts of perfections in
His own infinite perfection.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxix" next="lxx" prev="lxviii" title="SECT.  LXVII.  Man’s Liberty Consists in that his Will by determining, Modifies Itself.">
<h3 id="lxix-p0.1">SECT.  LXVII.  Man’s Liberty Consists in that his
Will by determining, Modifies Itself.</h3>

<p id="lxix-p1" shownumber="no">It is not the same with the modification of my soul which is called
will, and by some philosophers volition, as with the modifications of
bodies.  A body does not in the least modify itself, but is modified
by the sole power of God.  It does not move itself, it is moved;
it does not act in anything, it is only acted and actuated.  Thus
God is the only real and immediate cause of all the different modifications
of bodies.  As for spirits the case is different, for my will determines
itself.  Now to determine one’s self to a will is to modify
one’s self, and therefore my will modifies itself.  God may
prevent my soul, but He does not give it the will in the same manner
as He gives motion to bodies.  If it is God who modifies me, I
modify myself with Him, and am with Him a real cause of my own will. 
My will is so much my own that I am only to blame if I do not will what
I ought.  When I will a thing it is in my power not to will it,
and when I do not will it it is likewise in my power to will it. 
I neither am nor can be compelled in my will; for I cannot will what
I actually will in spite of myself, since the will I mean evidently
excludes all manner of constraint.  Besides the exemption from
all compulsion, I am likewise free from necessity.  I am conscious
and sensible that I have, as it were, a two-edged will, which at its
own choice may be either for the affirmative or the negative, the yes
or the no, and turn itself either towards an object or towards another. 
I know no other reason or determination of my will but my will itself. 
I will a thing because I am free to will it; and nothing is so much
in my power as either to will or not to will it.  Although my will
should not be constrained, yet if it were necessitated it would be as
strongly and invincibly determined to will as bodies are to move. 
An invincible necessity would have as much influence over the will with
respect to spirits as it has over motion with respect to bodies; and,
in such a case, the will would be no more accountable for willing than
a body for moving.  It is true the will would will what it would;
but the motion by which a body is moved is the same as the volition
by which the willing faculty wills.  If therefore volition be necessitated
as motion it deserves neither more nor less praise or blame.  For
though a necessitated will may seem to be a will unconstrained, yet
it is such a will as one cannot forbear having, and for which he that
has it is not accountable.  Nor does previous knowledge establish
true liberty, for a will may be preceded by the knowledge of divers
objects, and yet have no real election or choice.  Nor is deliberation
or the being in suspense any more than a vain trifle, if I deliberate
between two counsels when I am under an actual impotency to follow the
one and under an actual necessity to pursue the other.  In short,
there is no serious and true choice between two objects, unless they
be both actually ready within my reach so that I may either leave or
take which of the two I please.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxx" next="lxxi" prev="lxix" title="SECT.  LXVIII.  Will may Resist Grace, and Its Liberty is the Foundation of Merit and Demerit.">
<h3 id="lxx-p0.1">SECT.  LXVIII.  Will may Resist Grace, and Its Liberty
is the Foundation of Merit and Demerit.</h3>

<p id="lxx-p1" shownumber="no">When therefore I say I am free, I mean that my will is fully in my
power, and that even God Himself leaves me at liberty to turn it which
way I please, that I am not determined as other beings, and that I determine
myself.  I conceive that if that First Being prevents me, to inspire
me with a good-will, it is still in my power to reject His actual inspiration,
how strong soever it may be, to frustrate its effect, and to refuse
my assent to it.  I conceive likewise that when I reject His inspiration
for the good, I have the true and actual power not to reject it; just
as I have the actual and immediate power to rise when I remain sitting,
and to shut my eyes when I have them open.  Objects may indeed
solicit me by all their allurements and agreeableness to will or desire
them.  The reasons for willing may present themselves to me with
all their most lively and affecting attendants, and the Supreme Being
may also attract me by His most persuasive inspirations.  But yet
for all this actual attraction of objects, cogency of reasons, and even
inspiration of a Superior Being, I still remain master of my will, and
am free either to will or not to will.</p>
<p id="lxx-p2" shownumber="no">It is this exemption not only from all manner of constraint or compulsion
but also from all necessity and this command over my own actions that
render me inexcusable when I will evil, and praiseworthy when I will
good; in this lies merit and demerit, praise and blame; it is this that
makes either punishment or reward just; it is upon this consideration
that men exhort, rebuke, threaten, and promise.  This is the foundation
of all policy, instruction, and rules of morality.  The upshot
of the merit and demerit of human actions rests upon this basis, that
nothing is so much in the power of our will as our will itself, and
that we have this free-will—this, as it were, two-edged faculty—and
this elative power between two counsels which are immediately, as it
were, within our reach.  It is what shepherds and husbandmen sing
in the fields, what merchants and artificers suppose in their traffic,
what actors represent in public shows, what magistrates believe in their
councils, what doctors teach in their schools; it is that, in short,
which no man of sense can seriously call in question.  That truth
imprinted in the bottom of our hearts, is supposed in the practice,
even by those philosophers who would endeavour to shake it by their
empty speculations.  The intimate evidence of that truth is like
that of the first principles, which want no proof, and which serve themselves
as proofs to other truths that are not so clear and self-evident. 
But how could the First Being make a creature who is himself the umpire
of his own actions?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxi" next="lxxii" prev="lxx" title="SECT.  LXIX.  A Character of the Deity, both in the Dependence and Independence of Man.">
<h3 id="lxxi-p0.1">SECT.  LXIX.  A Character of the Deity, both in the Dependence
and Independence of Man.</h3>

<p id="lxxi-p1" shownumber="no">Let us now put together these two truths equally certain.  I
am dependent upon a First Being even in my own will; and nevertheless
I am free.  What then is this dependent liberty? how is it possible
for a man to conceive a free-will, that is given by a First Being? 
I am free in my will, as God is in His.  It is principally in this
I am His image and likeness.  What a greatness that borders upon
infinite is here!  This is a ray of the Deity itself: it is a kind
of Divine power I have over my will; but I am but a bare image of that
supreme Being so absolutely free and powerful.</p>
<p id="lxxi-p2" shownumber="no">The image of the Divine independence is not the reality of what it
represents; and, therefore, my liberty is but a shadow of that First
Being, by whom I exist and act.  On the one hand, the power I have
of willing evil is, indeed, rather a weakness and frailty of my will
than a true power: for it is only a power to fall, to degrade myself,
and to diminish my degree of perfection and being.  On the other
hand, the power I have to will good is not an absolute power, since
I have it not of myself.  Now liberty being no more than that power,
a precarious and borrowed power can constitute but a precarious, borrowed,
and dependent liberty; and, therefore, so imperfect and so precarious
a being cannot but be dependent.  But how is he free?  What
profound mystery is here!  His liberty, of which I cannot doubt,
shows his perfection; and his dependence argues the nothingness from
which he was drawn.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxii" next="lxxiii" prev="lxxi" title="SECT.  LXX.  The Seal and Stamp of the Deity in His Works.">
<h3 id="lxxii-p0.1">SECT.  LXX.  The Seal and Stamp of the Deity in His Works.</h3>

<p id="lxxii-p1" shownumber="no">We have seen the prints of the Deity, or to speak more properly,
the seal and stamp of God Himself, in all that is called the works of
nature.  When a man will not enter into philosophical subtleties,
he observes with the first cast of the eye a hand, that was the first
mover, in all the parts of the universe, and set all the wheels of the
great machine a-going.  The heavens, the earth, the stars, plants,
animals, our bodies, our minds: everything shows and proclaims an order,
an exact measure, an art, a wisdom, a mind superior to us, which is,
as it were, the soul of the whole world, and which leads and directs
everything to his ends, with a gentle and insensible, though omnipotent,
force.  We have seen, as it were, the architecture and frame of
the universe; the just proportion of all its parts; and the bare cast
of the eye has sufficed us to find and discover even in an ant, more
than in the sun, a wisdom and power that delights to exert itself in
the polishing and adorning its vilest works.  This is obvious,
without any speculative discussion, to the most ignorant of men; but
what a world of other wonders should we discover, should we penetrate
into the secrets of physics, and dissect the inward parts of animals,
which are framed according to the most perfect mechanics.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxiii" next="lxxiv" prev="lxxii" title="SECT.  LXXI.  Objection of the Epicureans, who Ascribe Everything to Chance, considered.">
<h3 id="lxxiii-p0.1">SECT.  LXXI.  Objection of the Epicureans, who Ascribe
Everything to Chance, considered.</h3>

<p id="lxxiii-p1" shownumber="no">I hear certain philosophers who answer me that all this discourse
on the art that shines in the universe is but a continued sophism. 
“All nature,” will they say, “is for man’s use,
it is true; but you have no reason to infer from thence, that it was
made with art, and on purpose for the use of man.  A man must be
ingenious in deceiving himself who looks for and thinks to find what
never existed.”  “It is true,” will they add,
“that man’s industry makes use of an infinite number of
things that nature affords, and are convenient for him; but nature did
not make those things on purpose for his conveniency.  As, for
instance, some country fellows climb up daily, by certain craggy and
pointed rocks, to the top of a mountain; but yet it does not follow
that those points of rocks were cut with art, like a staircase, for
the conveniency of men.  In like manner, when a man happens to
be in the fields, during a stormy rain, and fortunately meets with a
cave, he uses it, as he would do a house, for shelter; but, however,
it cannot be affirmed that this cave was made on purpose to serve men
for a house.  It is the same with the whole world: it was formed
by chance, and without design; but men finding it as it is, had the
art to turn and improve it to their own uses.  Thus the art you
admire both in the work and its artificer, is only in men, who know
how to make use of everything that surrounds them.”  This
is certainly the strongest objection those philosophers can raise; and
I hope they will have no reason to complain that I have weakened it;
but it will immediately appear how weak it is in itself when closely
examined.  The bare repetition of what I said before will be sufficient
to demonstrate it.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxiv" next="lxxv" prev="lxxiii" title="SECT.  LXXII.  Answer to the Objection of the Epicureans, who Ascribe all to Chance.">
<h3 id="lxxiv-p0.1">SECT.  LXXII.  Answer to the Objection of the Epicureans,
who Ascribe all to Chance.</h3>

<p id="lxxiv-p1" shownumber="no">What would one say of a man who should set up for a subtle philosopher,
or, to use the modern expression, a free-thinker, and who entering a
house should maintain it was made by chance, and that art had not in
the least contributed to render it commodious to men, because there
are caves somewhat like that house, which yet were never dug by the
art of man?  One should show to such a reasoner all the parts of
the house, and tell him for instance:—Do you see this great court-gate? 
It is larger than any door, that coaches may enter it.  This court
has sufficient space for coaches to turn in it.  This staircase
is made up of low steps, that one may ascend it with ease; and turns
according to the apartments and stories it is to serve.  The windows,
opened at certain distances, light the whole building.  They are
glazed, lest the wind should enter with the light; but they may be opened
at pleasure, in order to breathe a sweet air when the weather is fair. 
The roof is contrived to defend the whole house from the injuries of
the air.  The timber-work is laid slanting and pointed at the top,
that the rain and snow may easily slide down on both sides.  The
tiles bear one upon another, that they may cover the timber-work. 
The divers floors serve to make different stories, in order to multiply
lodgings within a small space.  The chimneys are contrived to light
fire in winter without setting the house on fire, and to let out the
smoke, lest it should offend those that warm themselves.  The apartments
are distributed in such a manner that they be disengaged from one another;
that a numerous family may lodge in the house, and the one not be obliged
to pass through another’s room; and that the master’s apartment
be the principal.  There are kitchens, offices, stables, and coach-houses. 
The rooms are furnished with beds to lie in, chairs to sit on, and tables
to write and eat on.  Sure, should one urge to that philosopher,
this work must have been directed by some skilful architect; for everything
in it is agreeable, pleasant, proportioned, and commodious; and besides,
he must needs have had excellent artists under him.  “Not
at all,” would such a philosopher answer; “you are ingenious
in deceiving yourself.  It is true this house is pleasant, agreeable,
proportioned, and commodious; but yet it made itself with all its proportions. 
Chance put together all the stones in this excellent order; it raised
the walls, jointed and laid the timber-work, cut open the casements,
and placed the staircase: do not believe any human hand had anything
to do with it.  Men only made the best of this piece of work when
they found it ready made.  They fancy it was made for them, because
they observe things in it which they know how to improve to their own
conveniency; but all they ascribe to the design and contrivance of an
imaginary architect, is but the effect of their preposterous imaginations. 
This so regular, and so well-contrived house, was made in just the same
manner as a cave, and men finding it ready made to their hands made
use of it, as they would in a storm, of a cave they should find under
a rock in a desert.”</p>
<p id="lxxiv-p2" shownumber="no">What thoughts could a man entertain of such a fantastic philosopher,
if he should persist seriously to assert that such a house displays
no art?  When we read the fabulous story of Amphion, who by a miraculous
effect of harmony caused the stones to rise, and placed themselves,
with order and symmetry, one on the top of another, in order to form
the walls of Thebes, we laugh and sport with that poetical fiction:
but yet this very fiction is not so incredible as that which the free-thinking
philosopher we contend with would dare to maintain.  We might,
at least, imagine that harmony, which consists in a local motion of
certain bodies, might (by some of those secret virtues, which we admire
in nature, without being acquainted with them) shake and move the stones
into a certain order and in a sort of cadence, which might occasion
some regularity in the building.  I own this explanation both shocks
and clashes with reason; but yet it is less extravagant than what I
have supposed a philosopher should say.  What, indeed, can be more
absurd, than to imagine stones that hew themselves, that go out of the
quarry, that get one on the top of another, without leaving any empty
space; that carry with them mortar to cement one another; that place
themselves in different ranks for the contrivance of apartments; and
who admit on the top of all the timber-roof, with the tiles, in order
to cover the whole work?  The very children, that cannot yet speak
plain, would laugh, if they were seriously told such a ridiculous story.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxv" next="lxxvi" prev="lxxiv" title="SECT.  LXXIII.  Comparison of the World with a Regular House.  A Continuation of the Answer to the Objection of the Epicureans.">
<h3 id="lxxv-p0.1">SECT.  LXXIII.  Comparison of the World with a Regular
House.  A Continuation of the Answer to the Objection of the Epicureans.</h3>

<p id="lxxv-p1" shownumber="no">But why should it appear less ridiculous to hear one say that the
world made itself, as well as that fabulous house?  The question
is not to compare the world with a cave without form, which is supposed
to be made by chance: but to compare it with a house in which the most
perfect architecture should be conspicuous.  For the structure
and frame of the least living creature is infinitely more artful and
admirable than the finest house that ever was built.</p>
<p id="lxxv-p2" shownumber="no">Suppose a traveller entering Saida, the country where the ancient
Thebes, with a hundred gates, stood formerly, and which is now a desert,
should find there columns, pyramids, obelisks, and inscriptions in unknown
characters.  Would he presently say: men never inhabited this place;
no human hand had anything to do here; it is chance that formed these
columns, that placed them on their pedestals, and crowned them with
their capitals, with such just proportions; it is chance that so firmly
jointed the pieces that make up these pyramids; it is chance that cut
the obelisks in one single stone, and engraved in them these characters? 
Would he not, on the contrary, say, with all the certainty the mind
of man is capable of: these magnificent ruins are the remains of a noble
and majestical architecture that flourished in ancient Egypt? 
This is what plain reason suggests, at the first cast of the eye, or
first sight, and without reasoning.  It is the same with the bare
prospect of the universe.  A man may by vain, long-winded, preposterous
reasonings confound his own reason and obscure the clearest notions:
but the single cast of the eye is decisive.  Such a work as the
world is never makes itself of its own accord.  There is more art
and proportion in the bones, tendons, veins, arteries, nerves, and muscles,
that compose man’s body, than in all the architecture of the ancient
Greeks and Egyptians.  The single eye of the least of living creatures
surpasses the mechanics of all the most skilful artificers.  If
a man should find a watch in the sands of Africa, he would never have
the assurance seriously to affirm, that chance formed it in that wild
place; and yet some men do not blush to say that the bodies of animals,
to the artful framing of which no watch can ever be compared, are the
effects of the caprices of chance.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxvi" next="lxxvii" prev="lxxv" title="SECT.  LXXIV.  Another Objection of the Epicureans drawn from the Eternal Motion of Atoms.">
<h3 id="lxxvi-p0.1">SECT.  LXXIV.  Another Objection of the Epicureans drawn
from the Eternal Motion of Atoms.</h3>

<p id="lxxvi-p1" shownumber="no">I am not ignorant of a reasoning which the Epicureans may frame into
an objection.  “The atoms will, they say, have an eternal
motion; their fortuitous concourse must, in that eternity, have already
produced infinite combinations.  Who says infinite, says what comprehends
all without exception.  Amongst these infinite combinations of
atoms which have already happened successively, all such as are possible
must necessarily be found: for if there were but one possible combination,
beyond those contained in that infinite, it would cease to be a true
infinite, because something might be added to it; and whatever may be
increased, being limited on the side it may receive an addition, is
not truly infinite.  Hence it follows that the combination of atoms,
which makes up the present system of the world, is one of the combinations
which the atoms have had successively: which being laid as a principle,
is it matter of wonder that the world is as it is now?  It must
have taken this exact form, somewhat sooner, or somewhat later, for
in some one of these infinite changes it must, at last, have received
that combination that makes it now appear so regular; since it must
have had, by turns, all combinations that can be conceived.  All
systems are comprehended in the total of eternity.  There is none
but the concourse of atoms, forms, and embraces, sooner or later. 
In that infinite variety of new spectacles of nature, the present was
formed in its turn.  We find ourselves actually in this system. 
The concourse of atoms that made will, in process of time, unmake it,
in order to make others, <span class="ital" id="lxxvi-p1.1">ad infinitum</span>, of all possible sorts. 
This system could not fail having its place, since all others without
exception are to have theirs, each in its turn.  It is in vain
one looks for a chimerical art in a work which chance must have made
as it is.</p>
<p id="lxxvi-p2" shownumber="no">“An example will suffice to illustrate this.  I suppose
an infinite number of combinations of the letters of the alphabet, successively
formed by chance.  All possible combinations are, undoubtedly,
comprehended in that total, which is truely infinite.  Now, it
is certain that Homer’s Iliad is but a combination of letters:
therefore Homer’s Iliad is comprehended in that infinite collection
of combinations of the characters of the alphabet.  This being
laid down as a principle, a man who will assign art in the Iliad, will
argue wrong.  He may extol the harmony of the verses, the justness
and magnificence of the expressions, the simplicity and liveliness of
images, the due proportion of the parts of the poem, its perfect unity,
and inimitable conduct; he may object that chance can never make anything
so perfect, and that the utmost effort of human wit is hardly capable
to finish so excellent a piece of work: yet all in vain, for all this
specious reasoning is visibly false.  It is certain, on the contrary,
that the fortuitous concourse of characters, putting them together by
turns with an infinite variety, the precise combination that composes
the Iliad must have happened in its turn, somewhat sooner or somewhat
later.  It has happened at last; and thus the Iliad is perfect,
without the help of any human art.”  This is the objection
fairly laid down in its full latitude; I desire the reader’s serious
and continued attention to the answers I am going to make to it.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxvii" next="lxxviii" prev="lxxvi" title="SECT.  LXXV.  Answers to the Objection of the Epicureans drawn from the Eternal Motion of Atoms.">
<h3 id="lxxvii-p0.1">SECT.  LXXV.  Answers to the Objection of the Epicureans
drawn from the Eternal Motion of Atoms.</h3>

<p id="lxxvii-p1" shownumber="no">Nothing can be more absurd than to speak of successive combinations
of atoms infinite in number; for the infinite can never be either successive
or divisible.  Give me, for instance, any number you may pretend
to be infinite, and it will still be in my power to do two things that
shall demonstrate it not to be a true infinite.  In the first place,
I can take an unit from it; and in such a case it will become less than
it was, and will certainly be finite; for whatever is less than the
infinite has a boundary or limit on the side where one stops, and beyond
which one might go.  Now the number which is finite as soon as
one takes from it one single unit, could not be infinite before that
diminution; for an unit is certainly finite, and a finite joined with
another finite cannot make an infinite.  If a single unit added
to a finite number made an infinite, it would follow from thence that
the finite would be almost equal to the infinite; than which nothing
can be more absurd.  In the second place, I may add an unit to
that number given, and consequently increase it.  Now what may
be increased is not infinite, for the infinite can have no bound; and
what is capable of augmentation is bounded on the side a man stops,
when he might go further and add some units to it.  It is plain,
therefore, that no divisible compound can be the true infinite.</p>
<p id="lxxvii-p2" shownumber="no">This foundation being laid, all the romance of the Epicurean philosophy
disappears and vanishes out of sight in an instant.  There never
can be any divisible body truly infinite in extent, nor any number or
any succession that is a true infinite.  From hence it follows
that there never can be an infinite successive number of combinations
of atoms.  If this chimerical infinite were real, I own all possible
and conceivable combinations of atoms would be found in it; and that
consequently all combinations that seem to require the utmost industry
would likewise be included in them.  In such a case, one might
ascribe to mere chance the most marvellous performances of art. 
If one should see palaces built according to the most perfect rules
of architecture, curious furniture, watches, clocks, and all sort of
machines the most compounded, in a desert island, he should not be free
reasonably to conclude that there have been men in that island who made
all those exquisite works.  On the contrary, he ought to say, “Perhaps
one of the infinite combinations of atoms which chance has successively
made, has formed all these compositions in this desert island without
the help of any man’s art;” for such an assertion is a natural
consequence of the principles of the Epicureans.  But the very
absurdity of the consequence serves to expose the extravagance of the
principle they lay down.  When men, by the natural rectitude of
their common sense, conclude that such sort of works cannot result from
chance, they visibly suppose, though in a confused manner, that atoms
are not eternal, and that in their fortuitous concourse they had not
an infinite succession of combinations.  For if that principle
were admitted, it would no longer be possible ever to distinguish the
works of art from those that should result from those combinations as
fortuitous as a throw at dice.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxviii" next="lxxix" prev="lxxvii" title="SECT.  LXXVI.  The Epicureans confound the Works of Art with those of Nature.">
<h3 id="lxxviii-p0.1">SECT.  LXXVI.  The Epicureans confound the Works of Art
with those of Nature.</h3>

<p id="lxxviii-p1" shownumber="no">All men who naturally suppose a sensible difference between the works
of art and those of chance do consequently, though but implicitly, suppose
that the combinations of atoms were not infinite—which supposition
is very just.  This infinite succession of combinations of atoms
is, as I showed before, a more absurd chimera than all the absurdities
some men would explain by that false principle.  No number, either
successive or continual, can be infinite; from whence it follows that
the number of atoms cannot be infinite, that the succession of their
various motions and combinations cannot be infinite, that the world
cannot be eternal, and that we must find out a precise and fixed beginning
of these successive combinations.  We must recur to a first individual
in the generations of every species.  We must likewise find out
the original and primitive form of every particle of matter that makes
a part of the universe.  And as the successive changes of that
matter must be limited in number, we must not admit in those different
combinations but such as chance commonly produces; unless we acknowledge
a Superior Being, who with the perfection of art made the wonderful
works which chance could never have made.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxix" next="lxxx" prev="lxxviii" title="SECT.  LXXVII.  The Epicureans take whatever they please for granted, without any Proof.">
<h3 id="lxxix-p0.1">SECT.  LXXVII.  The Epicureans take whatever they please
for granted, without any Proof.</h3>

<p id="lxxix-p1" shownumber="no">The Epicurean philosophers are so weak in their system that it is
not in their power to form it, or bring it to bear, unless one admits
without proofs their most fabulous postulata and positions.  In
the first place they suppose eternal atoms, which is begging the question;
for how can they make out that atoms have ever existed and exist by
themselves?  To exist by one’s self is the supreme perfection. 
Now, what authority have they to suppose, without proofs, that atoms
have in themselves a perfect, eternal, and immutable being?  Do
they find this perfection in the idea they have of every atom in particular? 
An atom not being the same with, and being absolutely distinguished
from, another atom, each of them must have in itself eternity and independence
with respect to any other being.  Once more, is it in the idea
these philosophers have of each atom that they find this perfection? 
But let us grant them all they suppose in this question, and even what
they ought to be ashamed to suppose—viz., that atoms are eternal,
subsisting by themselves, independent from any other being, and consequently
entirely perfect.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxx" next="lxxxi" prev="lxxix" title="SECT.  LXXVIII.  The Suppositions of the Epicureans are False and Chimerical.">
<h3 id="lxxx-p0.1">SECT.  LXXVIII.  The Suppositions of the Epicureans are
False and Chimerical.</h3>

<p id="lxxx-p1" shownumber="no">Must we suppose, besides, that atoms have motion of themselves? 
Shall we suppose it out of gaiety to give an air of reality to a system
more chimerical than the tales of the fairies?  Let us consult
the idea we have of a body.  We conceive it perfectly well without
supposing it to be in motion, and represent it to us at rest; nor is
its idea in this state less clear; nor does it lose its parts, figure,
or dimensions.  It is to no purpose to suppose that all bodies
are perpetually in some motion, either sensible or insensible; and that
though some parts of matter have a lesser motion than others, yet the
universal mass of matter has ever the same motion in its totality. 
To speak at this rate is building castles in the air, and imposing vain
imaginations on the belief of others; for who has told these philosophers
that the mass of matter has ever the same motion in its totality? 
Who has made the experiment of it?  Have they the assurance to
bestow the name of philosophy upon a rash fiction which takes for granted
what they never can make out?  Is there no more to do than to suppose
whatever one pleases in order to elude the most simple and most constant
truths?  What authority have they to suppose that all bodies incessantly
move, either sensibly or insensibly?  When I see a stone that appears
motionless, how will they prove to me that there is no atom in that
stone but what is actually in motion?  Will they ever impose upon
me bare suppositions, without any semblance of truth, for decisive proofs?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxxi" next="lxxxii" prev="lxxx" title="SECT.  LXXIX.  It is Falsely supposed that Motion is Essential to Bodies.">
<h3 id="lxxxi-p0.1">SECT.  LXXIX.  It is Falsely supposed that Motion is Essential
to Bodies.</h3>

<p id="lxxxi-p1" shownumber="no">However, let us go a step further, and, out of excessive complaisance,
suppose that all the bodies in Nature are actually in motion. 
Does it follow from thence that motion is essential to every particle
of matter?  Besides, if all bodies have not an equal degree of
motion; if some move sensibly, and more swiftly than others; if the
same body may move sometimes quicker and sometimes slower; if a body
that moves communicates its motion to the neighbouring body that was
at rest, or in such inferior motion that it was insensible—it
must be confessed that a mode or modification which sometimes increases,
and at other times decreases, in bodies is not essential to them. 
What is essential to a being is ever the same in it.  Neither the
motion that varies in bodies, and which, after having increased, slackens
and decreases to such a degree as to appear absolutely extinct and annihilated;
nor the motion that is lost, that is communicated, that passes from
one body to another as a foreign thing—can belong to the essence
of bodies.  And, therefore, I may conclude that bodies are perfect
in their essence without ascribing to them any motion.  If they
have no motion in their essence, they have it only by accident; and
if they have it only by accident, we must trace up that accident to
its true cause.  Bodies must either bestow motion on themselves,
or receive it from some other being.  It is evident they do not
bestow it on themselves, for no being can give what it has not in itself. 
And we are sensible that a body at rest ever remains motionless, unless
some neighbouring body happens to shake it.  It is certain, therefore,
that no body moves by itself, and is only moved by some other body that
communicates its motion to it.  But how comes it to pass that a
body can move another?  What is the reason that a ball which a
man causes to roll on a smooth table (billiards, for the purpose) cannot
touch another without moving it?  Why was it not possible that
motion should not ever communicate itself from one body to another? 
In such a case a ball in motion would stop near another at their meeting,
and yet never shake it.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxxii" next="lxxxiii" prev="lxxxi" title="SECT.  LXXX.  The Rules of Motion, which the Epicureans suppose do not render it essential to Bodies.">
<h3 id="lxxxii-p0.1">SECT.  LXXX.  The Rules of Motion, which the Epicureans
suppose do not render it essential to Bodies.</h3>

<p id="lxxxii-p1" shownumber="no">I may be answered that, according to the rules of motion among bodies,
one ought to shake or move another.  But where are those laws of
motion written and recorded?  Who both made them and rendered them
so inviolable?  They do not belong to the essence of bodies, for
we can conceive bodies at rest; and we even conceive bodies that would
not communicate their motion to others unless these rules, with whose
original we are unacquainted, subjected them to it.  Whence comes
this, as it were, arbitrary government of motion over all bodies? 
Whence proceed laws so ingenious, so just, so well adapted one to the
other, that the least alteration of or deviation from which would, on
a sudden, overturn and destroy all the excellent order we admire in
the universe?  A body being entirely distinct from another, is
in its nature absolutely independent from it in all respects. 
Whence it follows that it should not receive anything from it, or be
susceptible of any of its impressions.  The modifications of a
body imply no necessary reason to modify in the same manner another
body, whose being is entirely independent from the being of the first. 
It is to no purpose to allege that the most solid and most heavy bodies
carry or force away those that are less big and less solid; and that,
according to this rule, a great leaden ball ought to move a great ball
of ivory.  We do not speak of the fact; we only inquire into the
cause of it.  The fact is certain, and therefore the cause ought
likewise to be certain and precise.  Let us look for it without
any manner of prepossession or prejudice.  What is the reason that
a great body carries off a little one?  The thing might as naturally
happen quite otherwise; for it might as well happen that the most solid
body should never move any other body—that is to say, motion might
be incommunicable.  Nothing but custom obliges us to suppose that
Nature ought to act as it does.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxxiii" next="lxxxiv" prev="lxxxii" title="SECT.  LXXXI.  To give a satisfactory Account of Motion we must recur to the First Mover.">
<h3 id="lxxxiii-p0.1">SECT.  LXXXI.  To give a satisfactory Account of Motion
we must recur to the First Mover.</h3>

<p id="lxxxiii-p1" shownumber="no">Moreover, it has been proved that matter cannot be either infinite
or eternal; and, therefore, there must be supposed both a first atom
(by which motion must have begun at a precise moment), and a first concourse
of atoms (that must have formed the first combination).  Now, I
ask what mover gave motion to that first atom, and first set the great
machine of the universe a-going?  It is not possible to elude this
home question by an endless circle, for this question, lying within
a finite circumference, must have an end at last; and so we must find
the first atom in motion, and the first moment of that first motion,
together with the first mover, whose hand made that first impression.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxxiv" next="lxxxv" prev="lxxxiii" title="SECT.  LXXXII.  No Law of Motion has its Foundation in the Essence of the Body; and most of those Laws are Arbitrary.">
<h3 id="lxxxiv-p0.1">SECT.  LXXXII.  No Law of Motion has its Foundation in
the Essence of the Body; and most of those Laws are Arbitrary.</h3>

<p id="lxxxiv-p1" shownumber="no">Among the laws of motion we must look upon all those as arbitrary
which we cannot account for by the very essence of bodies.  We
have already made out that no motion is essential to any body. 
Wherefore all those laws which are supposed to be eternal and immutable
are, on the contrary, arbitrary, accidental, and made without cogent
necessity; for there is none of them that can be accounted for by the
essence of bodies.</p>
<p id="lxxxiv-p2" shownumber="no">If there were any law of motion essential to bodies, it would undoubtedly
be that by which bodies of less bulk and less solid are moved by such
as have more bulk and solidity.  And yet we have seen that that
very law is not to be accounted for by the essence of bodies. 
There is another which might also seem very natural—that, I mean,
by which bodies ever move rather in a direct than a crooked line, unless
their motion be otherwise determined by the meeting of other bodies. 
But even this rule has no foundation in the essence of matter. 
Motion is so very accidental, and super-added to the nature of bodies,
that we do not find in this nature of bodies any primitive or immutable
law by which they ought to move at all, much less to move according
to certain rules.  In the same manner as bodies might have existed,
and yet have never either been in motion or communicated motion one
to another, so they might never have moved but in a circular line, and
this motion might have been as natural to them as the motion in a direct
line.  Now, who is it that pitched upon either of these two laws
equally possible?  What is not determined by the essence of bodies
can have been determined by no other but Him who gave bodies the motion
they had not in their own essence.  Besides, this motion in a direct
line might have been upwards or downwards, from right to left, or from
left to right, or in a diagonal line.  Now, who is it that determined
which way the straight line should go?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxxv" next="lxxxvi" prev="lxxxiv" title="SECT.  LXXXIII.  The Epicureans can draw no Consequence from all their Suppositions, although the same should be granted them.">
<h3 id="lxxxv-p0.1">SECT.  LXXXIII.  The Epicureans can draw no Consequence
from all their Suppositions, although the same should be granted them.</h3>

<p id="lxxxv-p1" shownumber="no">Let us still attend the Epicureans even in their most fabulous suppositions,
and carry on the fiction to the last degree of complaisance.  Let
us admit motion in the essence of bodies, and suppose, as they do, that
motion in a direct line is also essential to all atoms.  Let us
bestow upon atoms both a will and an understanding, as poets did on
rocks and rivers.  And let us allow them likewise to choose which
way they will begin their straight line.  Now, what advantage will
these philosophers draw from all I have granted them, contrary to all
evidence?  In the first place, all atoms must have been in motion
from all eternity; secondly, they must all have had an equal motion;
thirdly, they must all have moved in a direct line; fourthly, they must
all have moved by an immutable and essential law.</p>
<p id="lxxxv-p2" shownumber="no">I am still willing to gratify our adversaries, so far as to suppose
that those atoms are of different figures, for I will allow them to
take for granted what they should be obliged to prove, and for which
they have not so much as the shadow of a proof.  One can never
grant too much to men who never can draw any consequence from what is
granted them; for the more absurdities are allowed them, the sooner
they are caught by their own principles.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxxvi" next="lxxxvii" prev="lxxxv" title="SECT.  LXXXIV.  Atoms cannot make any Compound by the Motion the Epicureans assign them.">
<h3 id="lxxxvi-p0.1">SECT.  LXXXIV.  Atoms cannot make any Compound by the
Motion the Epicureans assign them.</h3>

<p id="lxxxvi-p1" shownumber="no">These atoms of so many odd figures—some round, some crooked,
others triangular, &amp;c.—are by their essence obliged always
to move in a straight line, without ever deviating or bending to the
right or to the left; wherefore they never can hook one another, or
make together any compound.  Put, if you please, the sharpest hooks
near other hooks of the like make; yet if every one of them never moves
otherwise than in a line perfectly straight, they will eternally move
one near another, in parallel lines, without being able to join and
hook one another.  The two straight lines which are supposed to
be parallel, though immediate neighbours, will never cross one another,
though carried on <span class="ital" id="lxxxvi-p1.1">ad infinitum</span>; wherefore in all eternity, no
hooking, and consequently no compound, can result from that motion of
atoms in a direct line.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxxvii" next="lxxxviii" prev="lxxxvi" title="SECT.  LXXXV.  The Clinamen, Declination, or Sending of Atoms is a Chimerical Notion that throws the Epicureans into a gross Contradiction.">
<h3 id="lxxxvii-p0.1">SECT.  LXXXV.  The Clinamen, Declination, or Sending of
Atoms is a Chimerical Notion that throws the Epicureans into a gross
Contradiction.</h3>

<p id="lxxxvii-p1" shownumber="no">The Epicureans, not being able to shut their eyes against this glaring
difficulty, that strikes at the very foundation of their whole system,
have, for a last shift, invented what Lucretius calls clinamen—by
which is meant a motion somewhat declining or bending from the straight
line, and which gives atoms the occasion to meet and encounter. 
Thus they turn and wind them at pleasure, according as they fancy best
for their purpose.  But upon what authority do they suppose this
declination of atoms, which comes so pat to bear up their system? 
If motion in a straight line be essential to bodies, nothing can bend,
nor consequently join them, in all eternity; the clinamen destroys the
very essence of matter, and those philosophers contradict themselves
without blushing.  If, on the contrary, the motion in a direct
line is not essential to all bodies, why do they so confidently suppose
eternal, necessary, and immutable laws for the motion of atoms without
recurring to a first mover?  And why do they build a whole system
of philosophy upon the precarious foundation of a ridiculous fiction? 
Without the clinamen the straight line can never produce anything, and
the Epicurean system falls to the ground; with the clinamen, a fabulous
poetical invention, the direct line is violated, and the system falls
into derision and ridicule.</p>
<p id="lxxxvii-p2" shownumber="no">Both the straight line and the clinamen are airy suppositions and
mere dreams; but these two dreams destroy each other, and this is the
upshot of the uncurbed licentiousness some men allow themselves of supposing
as eternal truths whatever their imagination suggests them to support
a fable; while they refuse to acknowledge the artful and powerful hand
that formed and placed all the parts of the universe.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxxviii" next="lxxxix" prev="lxxxvii" title="SECT.  LXXXVI.  Strange Absurdity of the Epicureans, who endeavour to account for the Nature of the Soul by the Declination of Atoms.">
<h3 id="lxxxviii-p0.1">SECT.  LXXXVI.  Strange Absurdity of the Epicureans, who
endeavour to account for the Nature of the Soul by the Declination of
Atoms.</h3>

<p id="lxxxviii-p1" shownumber="no">To reach the highest degree of amazing extravagance, the Epicureans
have had the assurance to explain and account for what we call the soul
of man and his free-will, by the clinamen, which is so unaccountable
and inexplicable itself.  Thus they are reduced to affirm that
it is in this motion, wherein atoms are in a kind of equilibrium between
a straight line and a line somewhat circular, that human will consists.</p>
<p id="lxxxviii-p2" shownumber="no">Strange philosophy!  If atoms move only in a straight line,
they are inanimate, and incapable of any degree of knowledge, understanding,
or will; but if the very same atoms somewhat deviate from the straight
line, they become, on a sudden, animate, thinking, and rational. 
They are themselves intelligent souls, that know themselves, reflect,
deliberate, and are free in their acts and determinations.  Was
there ever a more absurd metamorphosis?  What opinion would men
have of religion if, in order to assert it, one should lay down principles
and positions so trifling and ridiculous as theirs who dare to attack
it in earnest?</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="lxxxix" next="xc" prev="lxxxviii" title="SECT.  LXXXVII.  The Epicureans cast a Mist before their own Eyes by endeavouring to explain the Liberty of Man by the Declination of Atoms.">
<h3 id="lxxxix-p0.1">SECT.  LXXXVII.  The Epicureans cast a Mist before their
own Eyes by endeavouring to explain the Liberty of Man by the Declination
of Atoms.</h3>

<p id="lxxxix-p1" shownumber="no">But let us consider to what degree those philosophers impose upon
their own understandings.  What can they find in the clinamen that,
with any colour, can account for the liberty of man?  This liberty
is not imaginary; for it is not in our power to doubt of our free-will,
any more than it is to doubt of what we are intimately conscious and
certain.  I am conscious I am free to continue sitting when I rise
in order to walk.  I am sensible of it with so entire certainty
that it is not in my power ever to doubt of it in earnest; and I should
be inconsistent with myself if I dared to say the contrary.  Can
the proof of our religion be more evident and convincing?  We cannot
doubt of the existence of God unless we doubt of our own liberty; from
whence I infer that no man can seriously doubt of the being of the Deity,
since no man can entertain a serious doubt about his own liberty. 
If, on the contrary, it be frankly acknowledged that men are really
free, nothing is more easy than to demonstrate that the liberty of man’s
will cannot consist of any combination of atoms, if one supposes that
there was no first mover, who gave matter arbitrary laws for its motion. 
Motion must be essential to bodies, and all the laws of motion must
also be as necessary as the essences of natures are.  Therefore,
according to this system, all the motions of bodies must be performed
by constant, necessary, and immutable laws; the motion in a straight
line must be essential to all atoms, that are not made to deviate from
it by the encounter of other atoms; the straight line must likewise
be essential either upwards or downwards, either from right to left,
or left to right, or some other diagonal way, fixed, precise, and immutable. 
Besides, it is evident that no atom can make another atom deviate; for
that other atom carries also in its essence the same invincible and
eternal determination to follow the straight line the same way. 
From hence it follows that all the atoms placed at first on different
lines must pursue <span class="ital" id="lxxxix-p1.1">ad infinitum</span> those parallel lines without ever
coming nearer one another; and that those who are in the same line must
follow one another <span class="ital" id="lxxxix-p1.2">ad infinitum</span> without ever coming up together,
but keeping still the same distance from one another.  The clinamen,
as we have already shown, is manifestly impossible: but, contrary to
evident truth, supposing it to be possible, in such a case it must be
affirmed that the clinamen is no less necessary, immutable, and essential
to atoms than the straight line.  Now, will anybody say that an
essential and immutable law of the local motion of atoms explains and
accounts for the true liberty of man?  Is it not manifest that
the clinamen can no more account for it than the straight line itself? 
The clinamen, supposing it to be true, would be as necessary as the
perpendicular line, by which a stone falls from the top of a tower into
the street.  Is that stone free in its fall?  However, the
will of man, according to the principle of the clinamen, has no more
freedom than that stone.  Is it possible for man to be so extravagant
as to dare to contradict his own conscience about his free-will, lest
he should be forced to acknowledge his God and maker?  To affirm,
on the one hand, that the liberty of man is imaginary, we must silence
the voice and stifle the sense of all nature; give ourselves the lie
in the grossest manner; deny what we are most intimately conscious and
certain of; and, in short, be reduced to believe that we have no eligibility
or choice of two courses, or things proposed, about which we fairly
deliberate upon any occasion.  Nothing does religion more honour
than to see men necessitated to fall into such gross and monstrous extravagance
as soon as they call in question the truths she teaches.  On the
other hand, if we own that man is truly free, we acknowledge in him
a principle that never can be seriously accounted for, either by the
combinations of atoms or the laws of local motion, which must be supposed
to be all equally necessary and essential to matter, if one denies a
first mover.  We must therefore go out of the whole compass of
matter, and search far from combined atoms some incorporeal principle
to account for free-will, if we admit it fairly.  Whatever is matter
and an atom, moves only by necessary, immutable, and invincible laws:
wherefore liberty cannot be found either in bodies, or in any local
motion; and so we must look for it in some incorporeal being. 
Now whose hand tied and subjected to the organs of this corporeal machine
that incorporeal being which must necessarily be in me united to my
body?  Where is the artificer that ties and unites natures so vastly
different?  Can any but a power superior both to bodies and spirits
keep them together in this union with so absolute a sway?  Two
crooked atoms, says an Epicurean, hook one another.  Now this is
false, according to his very system; for I have demonstrated that those
two crooked atoms never hook one another, because they never meet. 
But, however, after having supposed that two crooked atoms unite by
hooking one another, the Epicurean must be forced to own that the thinking
being, which is free in his operations, and which consequently is not
a collection of atoms, ever moved by necessary laws, is incorporeal,
and could not by its figure be hooked with the body it animates. 
Thus which way so ever the Epicurean turns, he overthrows his system
with his own hands.  But let us not, by any means, endeavour to
confound men that err and mistake, since we are men as well as they,
and no less subject to error.  Let us only pity them, study to
light and inform them with patience, edify them, pray for them, and
conclude with asserting an evident truth.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xc" next="xci" prev="lxxxix" title="SECT.  LXXXVIII.  We must necessarily acknowledge the Hand of a First Cause in the Universe without inquiring why that first Cause has left Defects in it.">
<h3 id="xc-p0.1">SECT.  LXXXVIII.  We must necessarily acknowledge the
Hand of a First Cause in the Universe without inquiring why that first
Cause has left Defects in it.</h3>

<p id="xc-p1" shownumber="no">Thus everything in the universe—the heavens, the earth, plants,
animals, and, above all, men—bears the stamp of a Deity. 
Everything shows and proclaims a set design, and a series and concatenation
of subordinate causes, over-ruled and directed with order by a superior
cause.</p>
<p id="xc-p2" shownumber="no">It is preposterous and foolish to criticise upon this great work. 
The defects that happen to be in it proceed either from the free and
disorderly will of man, which produces them by its disorder, or from
the ever holy and just will of God, who sometimes has a mind to punish
impious men, and at other times by the wicked to exercise and improve
the good.  Nay, it happens oftentimes that what appears a defect
to our narrow judgment in a place separate from the work is an ornament
with respect to the general design, which we are not able to consider
with views sufficiently extended and simple to know the perfection of
the whole.  Does not daily experience show that we rashly censure
certain parts of men’s works for want of being thoroughly acquainted
with the whole extent of their designs and schemes?  This happens,
in particular, every day with respect to the works of painters and architects. 
If writing characters were of an immense bigness, each character at
close view would take up a man’s whole sight, so that it would
not be possible for him to see above one at once; and, therefore, he
would not be able to read—that is, put different letters together,
and discover the sense of all those characters put together.  It
is the same with the great strokes of Providence in the conduct of the
whole world during a long succession of ages.  There is nothing
but the whole that is intelligible; and the whole is too vast and immense
to be seen at close view.  Every event is like a particular character
that is too large for our narrow organs, and which signifies nothing
of itself and separate from the rest.  When, at the consummation
of ages, we shall see in God—that is, in the true point and centre
of perspective—the total of human events, from the first to the
last day of the universe, together with their proportions with regard
to the designs of God, we shall cry out, “Lord, Thou alone art
just and wise!”  We cannot rightly judge of the works of
men but by examining the whole.  Every part ought not to have every
perfection, but only such as becomes it according to the order and proportion
of the different parts that compose the whole.  In a human body,
for instance, all the members must not be eyes, for there must be hands,
feet, &amp;c.  So in the universe, there must be a sun for the
day, but there must be also a moon for the night.  <span class="ital" id="xc-p2.1">Nec tibi
occurrit perfecta universitas</span>, <span class="ital" id="xc-p2.2">nisi ubi majora sic præsto
sunt</span>, <span class="ital" id="xc-p2.3">ut minora non desint</span>.  This is the judgment we
ought to make of every part with respect to the whole.  Any other
view is narrow and deceitful.  But what are the weak and puny designs
of men, if compared to that of the creation and government of the universe? 
“As much as the heavens are above the earth, as much,” says
God in the Holy Writ, “are My ways and My thoughts above yours.” 
Let, therefore, man admire what he understands, and be silent about
what he does not comprehend.  But, after all, even the real defects
of this work are only imperfections which God was pleased to leave in
it, to put us in mind that He drew and made it from nothing.  There
is not anything in the universe but what does and ought equally to bear
these two opposite characters: on the one side, the seal or stamp of
the artificer upon his work, and, on the other, the mark of its original
nothing, into which it may relapse and dwindle every moment.  It
is an incomprehensible mixture of low and great; of frailty in the matter,
and of art in the maker?  The hand of God is conspicuous in everything,
even in a worm that crawls on earth.  Nothingness, on the other
hand, appears everywhere, even in the most vast and most sublime genius. 
Whatever is not God, can have but a stinted perfection; and what has
but a stinted perfection, always remains imperfect on the side where
the boundary is sensible, and denotes that it might be improved. 
If the creature wanted nothing, it would be the Creator Himself; for
it would have the fulness of perfection, which is the Deity itself. 
Since it cannot be infinite, it must be limited in perfection, that
is, it must be imperfect on one side or other.  It may have more
or less imperfection, but still it must be imperfect.  We must
ever be able to point out the very place where it is defective, and
to say, upon a critical examination, “This is what it might have
had, what it has not.”</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xci" next="xcii" prev="xc" title="SECT.  LXXXIX.  The Defects of the Universe compared with those of a Picture.">
<h3 id="xci-p0.1">SECT.  LXXXIX.  The Defects of the Universe compared with
those of a Picture.</h3>

<p id="xci-p1" shownumber="no">Do we conclude that a piece of painting is made by chance when we
see in it either shades, or even some careless touches?  The painter,
we say, might have better finished those carnations, those draperies,
those prospects.  It is true, this picture is not perfect according
to the nicest rules of art.  But how extravagant would it be to
say, “This picture is not absolutely perfect; therefore it is
only a collection of colours formed by chance, nor did the hand of any
painter meddle with it!”  Now, what a man would blush to
say of an indifferent and almost artless picture he is not ashamed to
affirm of the universe, in which a crowd of incomprehensible wonders,
with excellent order and proportion, are conspicuous.  Let a man
study the world as much as he pleases; let him descend into the minutest
details; dissect the vilest of animals; narrowly consider the least
grain of corn sown in the ground, and the manner in which it germinates
and multiplies; attentively observe with what precautions a rose-bud
blows and opens in the sun, and closes again at night; and he will find
in all these more design, conduct, and industry than in all the works
of art.  Nay, what is called the art of men is but a faint imitation
of the great art called the laws of Nature, and which the impious did
not blush to call blind chance.  Is it therefore a wonder that
poets animated the whole universe, bestowed wings upon the winds, and
arrows on the sun, and described great rivers impetuously running to
precipitate themselves into the sea, and trees shooting up to heaven
to repel the rays of the sun by their thick shades?  These images
and figures have also been received in the language of the vulgar, so
natural it is for men to be sensible of the wonderful art that fills
all nature.  Poetry did only ascribe to inanimate creatures the
art and design of the Creator, who does everything in them.  From
the figurative language of the poets those notions passed into the theology
of the heathens, whose divines were the poets.  They supposed an
art, a power, or a wisdom, which they called <span class="ital" id="xci-p1.1">numen</span>, in creatures
the most destitute of understanding.  With them great rivers were
gods; and springs, naiads.  Woods and mountains had their particular
deities; flowers had their Flora; and fruits, Pomona.  After all,
the more a man contemplates Nature, the more he discovers in it an inexhaustible
stock of wisdom, which is, as it were, the soul of the universe.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xcii" next="xciii" prev="xci" title="SECT.  XC.  We must necessarily conclude that there is a First Being that created the Universe.">
<h3 id="xcii-p0.1">SECT.  XC.  We must necessarily conclude that there is
a First Being that created the Universe.</h3>

<p id="xcii-p1" shownumber="no">What must we infer from thence?  The consequence flows of itself. 
 “If so much wisdom and penetration,” says Minutius Felix,
“are required to observe the wonderful order and design of the
structure of the world, how much more were necessary to form it!” 
If men so much admire philosophers, because they discover a small part
of the wisdom that made all things, they must be stark blind not to
admire that wisdom itself.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xciii" next="xciv" prev="xcii" title="SECT.  XCI.  Reasons why Men do not acknowledge God in the Universe, wherein He shows Himself to them, as in a faithful glass.">
<h3 id="xciii-p0.1">SECT.  XCI.  Reasons why Men do not acknowledge God in
the Universe, wherein He shows Himself to them, as in a faithful glass.</h3>

<p id="xciii-p1" shownumber="no">This is the great object of the universe, wherein God, as it were
in a glass, shows Himself to mankind.  But some (I mean, the philosophers)
were bewildered in their own thoughts.  Everything with them turned
into vanity.  By their subtle reasonings some of them overshot
and lost a truth which a man finds naturally and simply in himself without
the help of philosophy.</p>
<p id="xciii-p2" shownumber="no">Others, intoxicated by their passions, live in a perpetual avocation
of thought.  To perceive God in His works a man must, at least,
consider them with attention.  But passions cast such a mist before
the eyes, not only of wild savages, but even of nations that seem to
be most civilised and polite, that they do not so much as see the light
that lights them.  In this respect the Egyptians, Grecians, and
Romans were no less blind or less brutish than the rudest and most ignorant
Americans.  Like these, they lay, as it were, buried within sensible
things without going up higher; and they cultivated their wit, only
to tickle themselves with softer sensations, without observing from
what spring they proceeded.  In this manner the generality of men
pass away their lives upon earth.  Say nothing to them, and they
will think on nothing except what flatters either their brutish passions
or vanity.  Their souls grow so heavy and unwieldy that they cannot
raise their thoughts to any incorporeal object.  Whatever is not
palpable and cannot be seen, tasted, heard, felt, or told, appears chimerical
to them.  This weakness of the soul, turning into unbelief, appears
strength of mind to them; and their vanity glories in opposing what
naturally strikes and affects the rest of mankind, just as if a monster
prided in not being formed according to the common rules of Nature,
or as if one born blind boasted of his unbelief with respect to light
and colours, which other men perceive and discern.</p>
</div1>

    <div1 id="xciv" next="toc" prev="xciii" title="SECT.  XCII.  A Prayer to God.">
<h3 id="xciv-p0.1">SECT.  XCII.  A Prayer to God.</h3>

<p id="xciv-p1" shownumber="no">O my God, if so many men do not discover Thee in this great spectacle
Thou givest them of all Nature, it is not because Thou art far from
any of us.  Every one of us feels Thee, as it were, with his hand;
but the senses, and the passions they raise, take up all the attention
of our minds.  Thus, O Lord, Thy light shines in darkness; but
darkness is so thick and gloomy that it does not admit the beams of
Thy light.  Thou appearest everywhere; and everywhere unattentive
mortals neglect to perceive Thee.  All Nature speaks of Thee and
resounds with Thy holy name; but she speaks to deaf men, whose deafness
proceeds from the noise and clutter they make to stun themselves. 
Thou art near and within them; but they are fugitive, and wandering,
as it were, out of themselves.  They would find Thee, O Sweet Light,
O Eternal Beauty, ever old and ever young, O Fountain of Chaste Delights,
O Pure and Happy Life of all who live truly, should they look for Thee
within themselves.  But the impious lose Thee only by losing themselves. 
Alas! Thy very gifts, which should show them the hand from whence they
flow, amuse them to such a degree as to hinder them from perceiving
it.  They live by Thee, and yet they live without thinking on Thee;
or, rather, they die by the Fountain of Life for want of quenching their
drought in that vivifying stream; for what greater death can there be
than not to know Thee, O Lord?  They fall asleep in Thy soft and
paternal bosom, and, full of the deceitful dreams by which they are
tossed in their sleep, they are insensible of the powerful hand that
supports them.  If Thou wert a barren, impotent, and inanimate
body, like a flower that fades away, a river that runs, a house that
decays and falls to ruin, a picture that is but a collection of colours
to strike the imagination, or a useless metal that glisters—they
would perceive Thee, and fondly ascribe to Thee the power of giving
them some pleasure, although in reality pleasure cannot proceed from
inanimate beings, which are themselves void and incapable of it, but
only from Thee alone, the true spring of all joy.  If therefore
Thou wert but a lumpish, frail, and inanimate being, a mass without
any virtue or power, a shadow of a being, Thy vain fantastic nature
would busy their vanity, and be a proper object to entertain their mean
and brutish thoughts.  But because Thou art too intimately within
them, and they never at home, Thou art to them an unknown God; for while
they rove and wander abroad, the intimate part of themselves is most
remote from their sight.  The order and beauty Thou scatterest
over the face of Thy creatures are like a glaring light that hides Thee
from and dazzles their sore eyes.  Thus the very light that should
light them strikes them blind; and the rays of the sun themselves hinder
them to see it.  In fine, because Thou art too elevated and too
pure a truth to affect gross senses, men who are become like beasts
cannot conceive Thee, though man has daily convincing instances of wisdom
and virtue without the testimony of any of his senses; for those virtues
have neither sound, colour, odour, taste, figure, nor any sensible quality. 
Why then, O my God, do men call Thy existence, wisdom, and power more
in question than they do those other things most real and manifest,
the truth of which they suppose as certain, in all the serious affairs
of life, and which nevertheless, as well as Thou, escape our feeble
senses?  O misery!  O dismal night that surrounds the children
of Adam!  O monstrous stupidity!  O confusion of the whole
man!  Man has eyes only to see shadows, and truth appears a phantom
to him.  What is nothing, is all; and what is all, is nothing to
him.  What do I behold in all Nature?  God.  God everywhere,
and still God alone.  When I think, O Lord, that all being is in
Thee, Thou exhaustest and swallowest up, O Abyss of Truth, all my thoughts. 
I know not what becomes of me.  Whatever is not Thou, disappears;
and scarce so much of myself remains wherewithal to find myself again. 
Who sees Thee not, never saw anything; and who is not sensible of Thee,
never was sensible of anything.  He is as if he were not. 
His whole life is but a dream.  Arise, O Lord, arise.  Let
Thy enemies melt like wax and vanish like smoke before Thy face. 
How unhappy is the impious soul who, far from Thee, is without God,
without hope, without eternal comfort!  How happy he who searches,
sighs, and thirsts after Thee!  But fully happy he on whom are
reflected the beams of Thy countenance, whose tears Thy hand has wiped
off, and whose desires Thy love has already completed.  When will
that time be, O Lord?  O Fair Day, without either cloud or end,
of which Thyself shalt be the sun, and wherein Thou shalt run through
my soul like a torrent of delight?  Upon this pleasing hope my
bones shiver, and cry out:—“Who is like Thee, O Lord? 
My heart melts and my flesh faints, O God of my soul, and my eternal
wealth.”</p>
</div1>

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