登陆注册
38634800000078

第78章 MACHIAVELLI(15)

Every man who has seen the world knows that nothing is so useless as a general maxim.If it be very moral and very true, it may serve for a copy to a charity-boy.If, like those of Rochefoucault, it be sparkling and whimsical, it may make an excellent motto for an essay.But few indeed of the many wise apophthegms which have been uttered, from the time of the Seven Sages of Greece to that of Poor Richard, have prevented a single foolish action.We give the highest and the most peculiar praise to the precepts of Machiavelli when we say that they may frequently be of real use in regulating conduct, not so much because they are more just or more profound than those which might be culled from other authors, as because they can be more readily applied to the problems of real life.

There are errors in these works.But they are errors which a writer, situated like Machiavelli, could scarcely avoid.They arise, for the most part, from a single defect which appears to us to pervade his whole system.In his political scheme, the means had been more deeply considered than the ends.The great principle, that societies and laws exist only for the purpose of increasing the sum of private happiness, is not recognised with sufficient clearness.The good of the body, distinct from the good of the members, and sometimes hardly compatible with the good of the members, seems to be the object which he proposes to himself.Of all political fallacies, this has perhaps had the widest and the most mischievous operation.The state of society in the little commonwealths of Greece, the close connection and mutual dependence of the citizens, and the severity of the laws of war, tended to encourage an opinion which, under such circumstances, could hardly be called erroneous.The interests of every individual were inseparably bound up with those of the State.An invasion destroyed his corn-fields and vineyards, drove him from his home, and compelled him to encounter all the hardships of a military life.A treaty of peace restored him to security and comfort.A victory doubled the number of his slaves.

A defeat perhaps made him a slave himself.When Pericles, in the Peloponnesian war, told the Athenians, that, if their country triumphed, their private losses would speedily be repaired, but, that, if their arms failed of success, every individual amongst them would probably be ruined, he spoke no more than the truth, He spoke to men whom the tribute of vanquished cities supplied with food and clothing, with the luxury of the bath and the amusements of the theatre, on whom the greatness of their Country conferred rank, and before whom the members of less prosperous communities trembled; to men who, in case of a change in the public fortunes, would, at least, be deprived of every comfort and every distinction which they enjoyed.To be butchered on the smoking ruins of their city, to be dragged in chains to a slave-market.to see one child torn from them to dig in the quarries of Sicily, and another to guard the harams of Persepolis, these were the frequent and probable consequences of national calamities.

Hence, among the Greeks, patriotism became a governing principle, or rather an ungovernable passion.Their legislators and their philosophers took it for granted that, in providing for the strength and greatness of the state, they sufficiently provided for the happiness of the people.The writers of the Roman empire lived under despots, into whose dominion a hundred nations were melted down, and whose gardens would have covered the little commonwealths of Phlius and Plataea.Yet they continued to employ the same language, and to cant about the duty of sacrificing everything to a country to which they owed nothing.

Causes similar to those which had influenced the disposition of the Greeks operated powerfully on the less vigorous and daring character of the Italians.The Italians, like the Greeks, were members of small communities.Every man was deeply interested in the welfare of the society to which he belonged, a partaker in its wealth and its poverty, in its glory and its shame.In the age of Machiavelli this was peculiarly the case.Public events had produced an immense sum of misery to private citizens.The Northern invaders had brought want to their boards, infamy to their beds, fire to their roofs, and the knife to their throats.

It was natural that a man who lived in times like these should overrate the importance of those measures by which a nation is rendered formidable to its neighbours, and undervalue those which make it prosperous within itself.

Nothing is more remarkable in the political treatises of Machiavelli than the fairness of mind which they indicate.It appears where the author is in the wrong, almost as strongly as where he is in the right.He never advances a false opinion because it is new or splendid, because he can clothe it in a happy phrase, or defend it by an ingenious sophism.His errors are at once explained by a reference to the circumstances in which he was placed.They evidently were not sought out; they lay in his way, and could scarcely be avoided.Such mistakes must necessarily be committed by early speculators in every science.

In this respect it is amusing to compare The Prince and the Discourses with the Spirit of Laws.Montesquieu enjoys, perhaps, a wider celebrity than any political writer of modern Europe.

Something he doubtless owes to his merit, but much more to his fortune.He had the good luck of a Valentine.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 最远星辰之恋

    最远星辰之恋

    夜辰,我们离婚吧!这场婚姻本就是场意外我不想在继续的一错再错下去。离开的这几年每晚星辰都会梦到夜辰。
  • 拽宝宝:母妃请回家

    拽宝宝:母妃请回家

    他是魔界的皇,她是天界的神。她好奇去了一趟魔镜,不小心偷看到他洗澡,竟被他吃干抹净,还扔给她一句:明天这个时候记得来侍候本皇。两条平行线就此有了交集。她人前是废物小姐,人后确是风华绝代的神。“喂,女人,你再不回家,本王就认了别人做母妃!”小正太跳出来威胁!情节虚构,切勿模仿
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 腹黑农女极品夫

    腹黑农女极品夫

    遭遇穿越,房屋破烂,亲戚叫骂,还有一个嗷嗷待哺的小包子,苏锦无语问天,有比她更惨的穿越者吗?居心叵测的极品亲戚们来个不停也就算了,居然还来了一匹腹黑狼!苏锦彻底怒了,这男人敢情是活腻歪了,竟然敢来跟她抢儿子,看她怎么使用十八般技能,将这匹狼给压倒!
  • EXO未婚妻:女扮男装魔王

    EXO未婚妻:女扮男装魔王

    夜秋瞳,魔王,在异能界‘他’是夜家的第二老幺,家里人都知道他是女孩子,但对外声称是男的,除了第二家族EXO,富豪榜上第一的Qunna,一不小心被自己的爷爷坑到泫音学院,当得知自己做了别人的未婚妻是,这信息量有点大,先容我消化消化再说。他们是神子的转世,异能界EXO家族里的少爷,当得知自己有了未婚妻时,啧啧,这表情无敌了!!当女扮男装的魔王碰上上一世神子的转世是会是什么效果呢??
  • 千年之恋—只为与你相遇

    千年之恋—只为与你相遇

    “我一定会在三生石上刻下我们的名字,无论在哪我都会找到你。”说完一颗晶莹的泪珠就滴落在罗一的肩膀上。罗一:“你也要记住你说的话。我没想过会遇到你,遇到了你更没想过会爱上你,可是我爱了。”无食鬼是一个经常找不到属于自己食物的女鬼,在一个风雨交加的夜晚她晕倒在“天下第一栈”的门口。拥有阴阳的罗一发现了她给她吃的东西,并收留了她。在出行之时会把无食鬼收进一个水壶里,方便携带。在不远处的桃花村出现了一个妖狐,无食鬼协同罗一前往桃花村。桃花村有一个美丽的桃花园,罗一在这个美丽妖娆的地方启动咒语,使无食鬼变得不再狼狈,伴随着桃花纷飞无食鬼变得美丽妖娆,其实她本来就很美。
  • 伪世子逆天录

    伪世子逆天录

    本书起点三组签约作品请放心收藏“戊戌寒岁天下一统,芒星落月归于府中,圣光灵气交错称雄,海外......”谜底是什么?宫闱斗争、官场争霸、弥天阴谋、两小无猜看伪世子步步荆棘,走自己的路,让别人无路可走
  • 绝色特工“弱”女子

    绝色特工“弱”女子

    她是弱女子,她是弱女子,她真是一介弱女子啊啊啊啊啊!呜呜呜,为啥大家都不相信她捏?她不过是随便玩玩,结果一不小心把王府玩垮了。她不过是感恩救人,结果一不小心把皇帝报废了。她不过是做个丫鬟,结果一不小心把主子做成暴发户了。她不过是公费旅游,结果一不小心把娃游出来了。
  • 重生之巨商王妃

    重生之巨商王妃

    经商,轻喜,甜宠(互宠)保险公司CEO在古代重生之后,能干嘛?当然是一边当着王妃,一边换个身份继续搞商业!只是家里有个败家王爷,还好王妃能赚钱,家底厚,够他败!只是这样何时才能搞保险?要不……不搞了?谁知道呢?看心情吧。
  • 万罪

    万罪

    末日风暴,觉醒血脉荣耀,踩着尸与骨的道路前行,只为追寻心中所执之念!杀无情,乱四方,为了我之守护,就算背负万宗罪,那又何妨!上帝说有光,我说不!于是人生只剩下黑暗……你是罪恶之子,所以你必然融于黑暗!