Edmund Burke
A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of our Ideas
Of the Sublime and Beautiful (1756)
1.
I. Novelty
THE
FIRST and the simplest emotion which we discover in the human mind, is
Curiosity. By curiosity, I mean whatever desire we have for, or whatever
pleasure we take in, novelty. We see children perpetually running from place to
place, to hunt out something new: they catch with great eagerness, and with
very little choice, at whatever comes before them; their attention is engaged
by everything, because everything has, in that stage of life, the charm of
novelty to recommend it. But as those things, which engage us merely by their
novelty, cannot attach us for any length of time, curiosity is the most
superficial of all the affections; it changes its object perpetually, it has an
appetite which is very sharp, but very easily satisfied; and it has always an
appearance of giddiness, restlessness, and anxiety. Curiosity, from its nature,
is a very active principle; it quickly runs over the greatest part of its
objects, and soon exhausts the variety which is commonly to be met with in
nature; the same things make frequent returns, and they return with less and
less of any agreeable effect. In short, the occurrences of life, by the time we
come to know it a little, would be incapable of affecting the mind with any
other sensations than those of loathing and weariness, if many things were not
adapted to affect the mind by means of other powers besides novelty in them,
and of other passions besides curiosity in ourselves. These powers and passions
shall be considered in their place. But whatever these powers are, or upon what
principle soever they affect the mind, it is absolutely necessary that they
should not be exerted in those things which a daily and vulgar use have brought
into a stale unaffecting familiarity. Some degree of novelty must be one of the
materials in every instrument which works upon the mind; and curiosity blends
itself more or less with all our passions.
1.
II. Pain and Pleasure
IT
seems then necessary towards moving the passions of people advanced in life to
any considerable degree, that the objects designed for that purpose, besides
their being in some measure new, should be capable of exciting pain or pleasure
from other causes. Pain and pleasure are simple ideas, incapable of definition.
People are not liable to be mistaken in their feelings, but they are very
frequently wrong in the names they give them, and in their reasonings about
them. Many are of the opinion, that pain arises necessarily from the removal of
some pleasure; as they think pleasure does from the ceasing or diminution of
some pain. For my part, I am rather inclined to imagine, that pain and
pleasure, in their most simple and natural manner of affecting, are each of a
positive nature, and by no means necessarily dependent on each other for their
existence. The human mind is often, and I think it is for the most part, in a
state neither of pain nor pleasure, which I call a state of indifference. When
I am carried from this state into a state of actual pleasure, it does not
appear necessary that I should pass through the medium of any sort of pain. If
in such a state of indifference, or ease, or tranquillity, or call it what you
please, you were to be suddenly entertained with a concert of music; or suppose
some object of a fine shape, and bright, lively colours, to be presented before
you; or imagine your smell is gratified with the fragrance of a rose; or if
without any previous thirst you were to drink of some pleasant kind of wine, or
to taste of some sweetmeat without being hungry; in all the several senses, of
hearing, smelling and tasting, you undoubtedly find a pleasure; yet if I
inquire into the state of your mind previous to these gratifications, you will
hardly tell me that they found you in any kind of pain; or, having satisfied
these several senses with their several pleasures, will you say that any pain
has succeeded, though the pleasure is absolutely over? Suppose on the other
hand, a man in the same state of indifference, to receive a violent blow, or to
drink of some bitter potion, or to have his ears wounded with some harsh and
grating sound; here is no removal of pleasure; and yet here is felt in every
sense which is affected, a pain very distinguishable. It may be said, perhaps,
that the pain in these cases had its rise from the removal of the pleasure
which the man enjoyed before, though that pleasure was of so low a degree as to
be perceived only by the removal. But this seems to me a subtilty that is not
discoverable in nature. For if, previous to the pain, I do not feel any actual
pleasure, I have no reason to judge that any such thing exists; since pleasure
is only pleasure as it is felt. The same may be said of pain, and with equal
reason. I can never persuade myself that pleasure and pain are mere relations,
which can only exist as they are contrasted; but I think I can discern clearly
that there are positive pains and pleasures, which do not at all depend upon
each other. Nothing is more certain to my own feelings than this. There is
nothing which I can distinguish in my mind with more clearness than the three
states, of indifference, of pleasure, and of pain. Every one of these I can
perceive without any sort of idea of its relation to anything else. Caius is
afflicted with a fit of the colic; this man is actually in pain; stretch Caius
upon the rack, he will feel a much greater pain: but does this pain of the rack
arise from the removal of any pleasure? or is the fit of the colic a pleasure
or a pain, just as we are pleased to consider it?
1.
III. The Difference Between the Removal of Pain, and Positive Pleasure
WE
shall carry this proposition yet a step farther. We shall venture to propose,
that pain and pleasure are not only not necessarily dependent for their
existence on their mutual diminution or removal, but that, in reality, the
diminution or ceasing of pleasure does not operate like positive pain; and that
the removal or diminution of pain, in its effect, has very little resemblance
to positive pleasure. 1The former of these propositions will, I believe,
be much more readily allowed than the latter; because it is very evident that
pleasure, when it has run its career, sets us down very nearly where it found
us. Pleasure of every kind quickly satisfies; and when it is over, we relapse into
indifference, or rather we fall into a soft tranquillity, which is tinged with
the agreeable colour of the former sensation. I own it is not at first view so
apparent, that the removal of a great pain does not resemble positive pleasure;
but let us recollect in what state we have found our minds upon escaping some
imminent danger, or on being released from the severity of some cruel pain. We
have on such occasions found, if I am not much mistaken, the temper of our
minds in a tenor very remote from that which attends the presence of positive
pleasure; we have found them in a state of much sobriety, impressed with a
sense of awe, in a sort of tranquillity shadowed with horror. The fashion of
the countenance and the gesture of the body on such occasions is so
correspondent to this state of mind, that any person, a stranger to the cause
of the appearance, would rather judge us under some consternation, than in the
enjoyment of anything like positive pleasure.
Iliad.
480.
As
when a wretch, who, conscious of his crime,
Pursued
for murder from his native clime,
Just
gains some frontier, breathless, pale, amazed;
All
gaze, all wonder! 1
This
striking appearance of the man whom Homer supposes to have just escaped an
imminent danger, the sort of mixed passion of terror and surprise, with which
he affects the spectators, paints very strongly the manner in which we find
ourselves affected upon occasions any way similar. For when we have suffered
from any violent emotion, the mind naturally continues in something like the
same condition, after the cause which first produced it has ceased to operate.
The tossing of the sea remains after the storm; and when this remain of horror
has entirely subsided, all the passion, which the accident raised, subsides
along with it; and the mind returns to its usual state of indifference. In
short, pleasure (I mean anything either in the inward sensation, or in the
outward appearance, like pleasure from a positive cause) has never, I imagine,
its origin from the removal of pain or danger.
Note
1. Mr. Locke [Essay on the Human
Understanding, l. ii. c. 20, sect. 16] thinks that the removal or lessening of
a pain is considered and operates as a pleasure, and the loss or diminishing of
pleasure as a pain. It is this opinion which we consider here. [ back ]
1.
IV. Of Delight and Pleasure as
Opposed to Each Other
BUT
shall we therefore say, that the removal of pain or its diminution is always
simply painful? or affirm that the cessation or the lessening of pleasure is
always attended itself with a pleasure? By no means. What I advance is no more
than this; first, that there are pleasures and pains of a positive and
independent nature; and, secondly, that the feeling which results from the
ceasing or diminution of pain does not bear a sufficient resemblance to
positive pleasure, to have it considered as of the same nature, or to entitle
it to be known by the same name; and, thirdly, that upon the same principle the
removal or qualification of pleasure has no resemblance to positive pain. It is
certain that the former feeling (the removal or moderation of pain) has
something in it far from distressing or disagreeable in its nature. This
feeling, in many cases so agreeable, but in all so different from positive
pleasure, has no name which I know; but that hinders not its being a very real
one, and very different from all others. It is most certain that every species
of satisfaction or pleasure, how different soever in its manner of affecting,
is of a positive nature in the mind of him who feels it. The affection is
undoubtedly positive; but the cause may be, as in this case it certainly is, a
sort of Privation. And it is
very reasonable that we should distinguish by some term two things so distinct
in nature, as a pleasure that is such simply, and without any relation, from
that pleasure which cannot exist without a relation, and that too a relation to
pain. Very extraordinary it would be, if these affections, so distinguishable
in their causes, so different in their effects, should be confounded with each
other, because vulgar use has ranged them under the same general title.
Whenever I have occasion to speak of this species of relative pleasure, I call
it Delight; and I shall take
the best care I can to use that word in no other sense. I am satisfied the word
is not commonly used in this appropriated signification; but I thought it
better to take up a word already known, and to limit its signification, than to
introduce a new one, which would not perhaps incorporate so well with the
language. I should never have presumed the least alteration in our words, if
the nature of the language, framed for the purposes of business rather than
those of philosophy, and the nature of my subject, that leads me out of the
common track of discourse, did not in a manner necessitate me to it. I shall
make use of this liberty with all possible caution. As I make use of the world Delight
to express the sensation which
accompanies the removal of pain or danger; so when I speak of positive
pleasure, I shall for the most part call it simply Pleasure.
1.
V. Joy and Grief
IT
must be observed that the cessation of pleasure affects the mind three ways. If
it simply ceases, after having continued a proper time, the effect is indifference;
if it be abruptly broken off,
there ensues an uneasy sense called disappointment; if the object be so totally lost that there is no
chance of enjoying it again, a passion arises in the mind, which is called grief.
Now there is none of these, not
even grief, which is the most violent, that I think has any resemblance to
positive pain. The person who grieves, suffers his passion to grow upon him; he
indulges it, he loves it: but this never happens in the case of actual pain,
which no man ever willingly endured for any considerable time. That grief
should be willingly endured, though far from a simply pleasing sensation, is
not so difficult to be understood. It is the nature of grief to keep its object
perpetually in its eye, to present it in its most pleasurable views, to repeat
all the circumstances that attend it, even to the last minuteness; to go back
to every particular enjoyment, to dwell upon each, and to find a thousand new
perfections in all, that were not sufficiently understood before; in grief, the
pleasure is still uppermost;
and the affliction we suffer has no resemblance to absolute pain, which is
always odious, and which we endeavor to shake off as soon as possible. The
Odyssey of Homer, which abounds with so many natural and affecting images, has
none more striking than those which Menelaus raises of the calamitous fate of
his friends, and his own manner of feeling it. He owns, indeed, that he often
gives himself some intermission from such melancholy reflections; but he
observes, too, that, melancholy as they are, they give him pleasure.
Hom.
Od. [Greek]. 100.
Still
in short intervals of pleasing woe,
Regardful
of the friendly dues I owe,
I
to the glorious dead, for ever dear,
Indulge
the tribute of a grateful tear.
On
the other hand, when we recover our health, when we escape an imminent danger,
is it with joy that we are affected? The sense on these occasions is far from
that smooth and voluptuous satisfaction which the assured prospect of pleasure
bestows. The delight which arises from the modifications of pain confesses the
stock from whence it sprung, in its solid, strong, and severe nature.
1.
VI. Of the Passions Which Belong to Self-Preservation
MOST
of the ideas which are capable of making a powerful impression on the mind,
whether simply of Pain or Pleasure, or of the modifications of those, may be
reduced very nearly to these two heads, self-preservation and society; to the ends of one or the other of which all our passions are
calculated to answer. The passions which concern self-preservation, turn mostly
on pain or danger. The ideas of pain, sickness, and death, fill the mind with strong emotions of horror; but life and health, though they put us in a capacity of being affected with pleasure,
make no such impression by the simple enjoyment. The passions therefore which
are conversant about the preservation of the individual turn chiefly on pain
and danger, and they are the most powerful of all the passions.
1.
VII. Of the Sublime
WHATEVER
is fitted in any sort to excite the ideas of pain and danger, that is to say,
whatever is in any sort terrible, or is conversant about terrible objects, or
operates in a manner analogous to terror, is a source of the sublime; that is, it is productive of the strongest emotion
which the mind is capable of feeling. I say the strongest emotion, because I am
satisfied the ideas of pain are much more powerful than those which enter on
the part of pleasure. Without all doubt, the torments which we may be made to
suffer are much greater in their effect on the body and mind, than any pleasure
which the most learned voluptuary could suggest, or than the liveliest
imagination, and the most sound and exquisitely sensible body, could enjoy.
Nay, I am in great doubt whether any man could be found, who would earn a life
of the most perfect satisfaction, at the price of ending it in the torments,
which justice inflicted in a few hours on the late unfortunate regicide in
France. But as pain is stronger in its operation than pleasure, so death is in
general a much more affecting idea than pain; because there are very few pains,
however exquisite, which are not preferred to death: nay, what generally makes
pain itself, if I may say so, more painful, is, that it is considered as an
emissary of this king of terrors. When danger or pain press too nearly, they
are incapable of giving any delight, and are simply terrible; but at certain
distances, and with certain modifications, they may be, and they are,
delightful, as we every day experience. The cause of this I shall endeavour to
investigate hereafter.
1.
VIII. Of the Passions Which Belong to Society
THE
OTHER head under which I class our passions, is that of society, which may be divided into two sorts. I. The
society of the sexes, which
answers the purposes of propagation; and next, that more general society, which we have with men and with other animals, and
which we may in some sort be said to have even with the inanimate world. The
passions belonging to the preservation of the individual turn wholly on pain
and danger: those which belong to generation have their origin in gratifications and pleasures;
the pleasure most directly
belonging to this purpose is of a lively character, rapturous and violent, and
confessedly the highest pleasure of sense; yet the absence of this so great an
enjoyment scarce amounts to an uneasiness; and, except at particular times, I
do not think it affects at all. When men describe in what manner they are
affected by pain and danger, they do not dwell on the pleasure of health and
the comfort of security, and then lament the loss of these satisfactions: the
whole turns upon the actual pains and horrors which they endure. But if you
listen to the complaints of a forsaken lover, you observe that he insists
largely on the pleasures which he enjoyed, or hoped to enjoy, and on the
perfection of the object of his desires; it is the loss which is always uppermost in his mind. The violent
effects produced by love, which has sometimes been even wrought up to madness,
is no objection to the rule which we seek to establish. When men have suffered
their imaginations to be long affected with any idea, it so wholly engrosses
them as to shut out by degrees almost every other, and to break down every
partition of the mind which would confine it. Any idea is sufficient for the
purpose, as is evident from the infinite variety of causes, which give rise to
madness: but this at most can only prove, that the passion of love is capable
of producing very extraordinary effects, not that its extraordinary emotions
have any connexion with positive pain.
1.
IX. The Final Cause of the Difference Between the Passions Belonging to
Self-Preservation and Those Which Regard the Society of the Sexes
THE
FINAL cause of the difference in character between the passions which regard
self-preservation, and those which are directed to the multiplication of the
species, will illustrate the foregoing remarks yet further; and it is, I imagine,
worthy of observation even upon its own account. As the performance of our
duties of every kind depends upon life, and the performing them with vigour and
efficacy depends upon health, we are very strongly affected with whatever
threatens the destruction of either: but as we are not made to acquiesce in
life and health, the simple enjoyment of them is not attended with any real
pleasure, lest, satisfied with that, we should give ourselves over to indolence
and inaction. On the other hand, the generation of mankind is a great purpose,
and it is requisite that men should be animated to the pursuit of it by some
great incentive. It is therefore attended with a very high pleasure; but as it
is by no means designed to be our constant business, it is not fit that the
absence of this pleasure should be attended with any considerable pain. The
difference between men and brutes, in this point, seems to be remarkable. Men
are at all times pretty equally disposed to the pleasures of love, because they
are to be guided by reason in the time and manner of indulging them. Had any
great pain arisen from the want of this satisfaction, reason, I am afraid,
would find great difficulties in the performance of its office. But brutes, who
obey laws, in the execution of which their own reason has but little share,
have their stated seasons; at such times it is not improbable that the
sensation from the want is very troublesome, because the end must be then
answered, or be missed in many, perhaps for ever; as the inclination returns
only with its season.
1.
X. Of Beauty
THE
PASSION which belongs to generation, merely as such, is lust only. This is
evident in brutes, whose passions are more unmixed, and which pursue their
purposes more directly than ours. The only distinction they observe with regard
to their mates, is that of sex. It is true, that they stick severally to their
own species in preference to all others. But this preference, I imagine, does
not arise from any sense of beauty which they find in their species, as Mr.
Addison supposes, but from a law of some other kind, to which they are subject;
and this we may fairly conclude, from their apparent want of choice amongst
those objects to which the barriers of their species have confined them. But
man, who is a creature adapted to a greater variety and intricacy of relation,
connects with the general passion the idea of some social qualities, which direct and heighten the appetite
which he has in common with all other animals; and as he is not designed like
them to live at large, it is fit that he should have something to create a
preference, and fix his choice; and this in general should be some sensible
quality; as no other can so quickly, so powerfully, or so surely produce its
effect. The object therefore of this mixed passion, which we call love, is the beauty
of the sex. Men are carried to the sex in general, as it is
the sex, and by the common law of nature; but they are attached to particulars
by personal beauty. I call
beauty a social quality; for where women and men, and not only they, but when
other animals give us a sense of joy and pleasure in beholding them, (and there
are many that do so,) they inspire us with sentiments of tenderness and
affection towards their persons; we like to have them near us, and we enter
willingly into a kind of relation with them, unless we should have strong
reasons to the contrary. But to what end, in many cases, this was designed, I
am unable to discover; for I see no greater reason for a connexion between man
and several animals who are attired in so engaging a manner, than between him
and some others who entirely want this attraction, or possess it in a far
weaker degree. But it is probable, that Providence did not make even this
distinction, but with a view to some great end; though we cannot perceive
distinctly what it is, as his wisdom is not our wisdom, nor our ways his ways.
1.
XI. Society and Solitude
THE
SECOND branch of the social passions is that which administers to society in
general. With regard to this, I
observe, that society, merely as society, without any particular heightenings,
gives us no positive pleasure in the enjoyment; but absolute and entire solitude,
that is, the total and perpetual
exclusion from all society, is as great a positive pain as can almost be
conceived. Therefore in the balance between the pleasure of general society and the pain of absolute solitude, pain is the predominant idea. But the pleasure of any
particular social enjoyment outweighs very considerably the uneasiness caused
by the want of that particular enjoyment; so that the strongest sensations
relative to the habitudes of particular society are sensations of pleasure. Good company, lively
conversation, and the endearments of friendship, fill the mind with great
pleasure; a temporary solitude, on the other hand, is itself agreeable. This
may perhaps prove that we are creatures designed for contemplation as well as
action; since solitude as well as society has its pleasures; as from the former
observation we may discern, that an entire life of solitude contradicts the
purposes of our being, since death itself is scarcely an idea of more terror.
1.
XII. Sympathy, Imitation, and Ambition
UNDER
this denomination of society, the passions are of a complicated kind, and
branch out into a variety of forms, agreeably to that variety of ends they are
to serve in the great chain of society. The three principal links in this chain
are sympathy, imitation, and ambition.
1.
XIII. Sympathy
ITis
by the first of these passions that we enter into the concerns of others; that
we are moved as they are moved, and are never suffered to be indifferent
spectators of almost anything which men can do or suffer. For sympathy must be
considered as a sort of substitution, by which we are put into the place of
another man, and affected in many respects as he is affected; so that this
passion may either partake of the nature of those which regard
self-preservation, and turning upon pain may be a source of the sublime or it
may turn upon ideas of pleasure; and then whatever has been said of the social
affections, whether they regard society in general, or only some particular
modes of it, may be applicable here. It is by this principle chiefly that
poetry, painting, and other affecting arts, transfuse their passions from one
breast to another, and are often capable of grafting a delight on wretchedness,
misery, and death itself. It is a common observation, that objects which in the
reality would shock, are in tragical, and such like representations, the source
of a very high species of pleasure. This, taken as a fact, has been the cause
of much reasoning. The satisfaction has been commonly attributed, first, to the
comfort we receive in considering that so melancholy a story is no more than a
fiction; and, next, to the contemplation of our own freedom from the evils
which we see represented. I am afraid it is a practice much too common in
inquiries of this nature, to attribute the cause of feelings which merely arise
from the mechanical structure of our bodies, or from the natural frame and
constitution of our minds, to certain conclusions of the reasoning faculty on
the objects presented to us; for I should imagine, that the influence of reason
in producing our passions is nothing near so extensive as it is commonly
believed.
1.
XIV The Effects of Sympathy in the Distresses of Others
TO
examine this point concerning the effect of tragedy in a proper manner, we must
previously consider how we are affected by the feelings of our fellow-creatures
in circumstances of real distress. I am convinced we have a degree of delight,
and that no small one, in the real misfortunes and pains of others; for let the
affection be what it will in appearance, if it does not make us shun such
objects, if on the contrary it induces us to approach them, if it makes us
dwell upon them, in this case I conceive we must have a delight or pleasure of
some species or other in contemplating objects of this kind. Do we not read the
authentic histories of scenes of this nature with as much pleasure as romances
or poems, where the incidents are fictitious? The prosperity of no empire, nor
the grandeur of no king, can so agreeably affect in the reading, as the ruin of
the state of Macedon, and the distress of its unhappy prince. Such a
catastrophe touches us in history as much as the destruction of Troy does in
fable. Our delight, in cases of this kind, is very greatly heightened, if the
sufferer be some excellent person who sinks under an unworthy fortune. Scipio
and Cato are both virtuous characters; but we are more deeply affected by the
violent death of the one, and the ruin of the great cause he adhered to, than
with the deserved triumphs and uninterrupted prosperity of the other; for
terror is a passion which always produce delight when it does not press too
closely; and pity is a passion accompanied with pleasure, because it arises
from love and social affection. Whenever we are formed by nature to any active
purpose, the passion which animates us to it is attended with delight, or a
pleasure of some kind, let the subject-matter be what it will; and as our
Creator has designed that we should be united by the bond of sympathy, he has
strengthened that bond by a proportionable delight; and there most where our
sympathy is most wanted,‹in the distresses of others. If this passion was
simply painful, we would shun with the greatest care all persons and places
that could excite such a passion; as some, who are so far gone in indolence as
not to endure any strong impression, actually do. But the case is widely
different with the greater part of mankind; there is no spectacle we so eagerly
pursue, as that of some uncommon and grievous calamity; so that whether the
misfortune is before our eyes, or whether they are turned back to it in
history, it always touches with delight. This is not an unmixed delight, but
blended with no small uneasiness. The delight we have in such things, hinders
us from shunning scenes of misery; and the pain we feel prompts us to relieve
ourselves in relieving those who suffer; and all this antecedent to any
reasoning, by an instinct that works us to its own purposes without our
concurrence.
1.
XV. Of the Effects of Tragedy
IT
is thus in real calamities. In imitated distresses the only difference is the
pleasure resulting from the effects of imitation; for it is never so perfect,
but we can perceive it is imitation, and on that principle are somewhat pleased
with it. And indeed in some cases we derive as much or more pleasure from that
source than from the thing itself. But then I imagine we shall be much
mistaken, if we attribute any considerable part of our satisfaction in tragedy
to the consideration that tragedy is a deceit, and its representations no
realities. The nearer it approaches the reality, and the farther it removes us
from all idea of fiction, the more perfect is its power. But be its power of
what kind it will, it never approaches to what it represents. Choose a day on
which to represent the most sublime and affecting tragedy we have; appoint the
most favourite actors; spare no cost upon the scenes and decorations, unite the
greatest efforts of poetry, painting, and music; and when you have collected
your audience, just at the moment when their minds are erect with expectation,
let it be reported that a state criminal of high rank is on the point of being
executed in the adjoining square; in a moment the emptiness of the theatre
would demonstrate the comparative weakness of the imitative arts, and proclaim
the triumph of the real sympathy. I believe that this notion of our having a
simple pain in the reality, yet a delight in the representation, arises from
hence, that we do not sufficiently distinguish what we would by no means choose
to do, from what we should be eager enough to see if it was once done. The
delight in seeing things, which, so far from doing, our heartiest wishes would
be to see redressed. This noble capital, the pride of England and of Europe, I
believe no man is so strangely wicked as to desire to see destroyed by a
conflagration or an earthquake, though he should be removed himself to the
greatest distance from the danger. But suppose such a fatal accident to have
happened, what numbers from all parts would crowd to behold the ruins, and
amongst many who would have been content never to have seen London in its
glory! Nor is it, either in real or fictitious distresses, our immunity from
them which produces our delight; in my own mind I can discover nothing like it.
I apprehend that this mistake is owing to a sort of sophism, by which we are
frequently imposed upon; it arises from our not distinguishing between what is
indeed a necessary condition to our doing or suffering anything in general, and
what is the cause of some
particular act. If a man kills me with a sword, it is a necessary condition to
this that we should have been both of us alive before the fact; and yet it
would be absurd to say, that our being both living creatures was the cause of
his crime and of my death. So it is certain, that it is absolutely necessary my
life should be out of any imminent hazard, before I can take a delight in the
sufferings of others, real or imaginary, or indeed in anything else from any
cause whatsoever. But then it is a sophism to argue from thence, that this
immunity is the cause of my delight either on these or on any occasions. No one
can distinguish such a cause of satisfaction in his own mind, I believe; nay,
when we do not suffer any very acute pain, nor are exposed to any imminent
danger of our lives, we can feel for others, whilst we suffer ourselves; and
often then most when we are softened by affliction; we see with pity even distresses
which we would accept in the place of our own.
1.
XVI. Imitation
THE
SECOND passion belonging to society is imitation, or, if you will, a desire of
imitating, and consequently a pleasure in it. This passion arises from much the
same cause with sympathy. For as sympathy makes us take a concern in whatever
men feel, so this affection prompts us to copy whatever they do; and
consequently we have a pleasure in imitating, and in whatever belongs to
imitation, merely as it is such, without any intervention of the reasoning
faculty, but solely from our natural constitution, which Providence has framed
in such a manner as to find either pleasure or delight, according to the nature
of the object, in whatever regards the purposes of our being. It is by
imitation far more than by precept, that we learn everything; and what we learn
thus, we acquire not only more effectually, but more pleasantly. This forms our
manners, our opinions, our lives. It is one of the strongest links of society;
it is a species of mutual compliance, which all men yield to each other,
without constraint to themselves, and which is extremely flattering to all.
Herein it is that painting and many other agreeable arts have laid one of the
principal foundations of their power. And since, by its influence on our
manners and our passions, it is of such great consequence, I shall here venture
to lay down a rule, which may inform us with a good degree of certainty when we
are to attribute the power of the arts to imitation, or to our pleasure in the
skill of the imitator merely, and when to sympathy, or some other cause in conjunction
with it. When the object represented in poetry or painting is such as we could
have no desire of seeing in the reality, then I may be sure that its power in
poetry or painting is owing to the power of imitation, and to no cause
operating in the thing itself. So it is with most of the pieces which the
painters call still-life. In these a cottage, a dunghill, the meanest and most
ordinary utensils of the kitchen, are capable of giving us pleasure. But when
the object of the painting or poem is such as we should run to see if real, let
it affect us with what odd sort of sense it will, we may rely upon it, that the
power of the poem or picture is more owing to the nature of the thing itself
than to the mere effect of imitation, or to a consideration of the skill of the
imitator, however excellent. Aristotle has spoken so much and so boldly upon
the force of imitation in his Poetics, that it makes any further discourse upon
this subject the less necessary.
1.
XVII. Ambition
ALTHOUGH
imitation is one of the great instruments used by Providence in bringing our
nature towards its perfection, yet if men gave themselves up to imitation
entirely, and each followed the other, and so on in an eternal circle, it is
easy to see that there never could be any improvement amongst them. Men must
remain as brutes do, the same at the end that they are at this day, and that
they were in the beginning of the world. To prevent this, God has planted in
man a sense of ambition, and a satisfaction arising from the contemplation of
his excelling his fellows in something deemed valuable amongst them. It is this
passion that drives men to all the ways we see in use of signalizing
themselves, and that tends to make whatever excites in a man the idea of this
distinction so very pleasant. It has been so strong as to make very miserable
men take comfort, that they were supreme in misery; and certain it is, that,
where we cannot distinguish ourselves by something excellent, we begin to take
a complacency in some singular infirmities, follies, or defects of one kind or
other. It is on this principle that flattery is so prevalent; for flattery is
no more than what raises in a man¹s mind an idea of a preference which he has
not. Now, whatever, either on good or upon bad grounds, tends to raise a man in
his own opinion, produces a sort of swelling and triumph, that is extremely
grateful to the human mind; and this swelling is never more perceived, nor
operates with more force, than when without danger we are conversant with
terrible objects; the mind always claiming to itself some part of the dignity
and importance of the things which it contemplates. Hence proceeds what
Longinus has observed of that glorying sense of inward greatness, that always
fills the reader of such passages in poets and orators as are sublime; it is
what every man must have felt in himself upon such occasions.
1.
XVIII. The Recapitulation
TO
draw the whole of what has been said into a few distinct points:-The passions
which belong to self-preservation turn on pain and danger; they are simply
painful when their causes immediately affect us; they are delightful when we
have an idea of pain and danger, without being actually in such circumstances;
this delight I have not called pleasure, because it turns on pain, and because
it is different enough from any idea of positive pleasure. Whatever excites
this delight, I call sublime. The
passions belonging to self-preservation are the strongest of all the passions.
The
second head to which the passions are referred with relation to their final
cause, is society. There are two sorts of societies. The first is, the society
of sex. The passion belonging to this is called love, and it contains a mixture
of lust; its object is the beauty of women. The other is the great society with
man and all other animals. The passion subservient to this is called likewise
love, but it has no mixture of lust, and its object is beauty; which is a name
I shall apply to all such qualities in things as induce in us a sense of
affection and tenderness, or some other passion the most nearly resembling
these. The passion of love has its rise in positive pleasure; it is, like all
things which grow out of pleasure, capable of being mixed with a mode of
uneasiness, that is, when an idea of its object is excited in the mind with an
idea at the same time of having irretrievably lost it. This mixed sense of
pleasure I have not called pain, because
it turns upon actual pleasure, and because it is, both in its cause and in most
of its effects, of a nature altogether different.
Next
to the general passion we have for society, to a choice in which we are
directed by the pleasure we have in the object, the particular passion under
this head called sympathy has the greatest extent. The nature of this passion
is, to put us in the place of another in whatever circumstance he is in, and to
affect us in a like manner; so that this passion may, as the occasion requires,
turn either on pain or pleasure; but with the modifications mentioned in some
cases in sect. II. As to imitation and preference, nothing more need be said.
1.
XIX. The Conclusion
I
BELIEVED that an attempt to range and methodize some of our most leading
passions would be a good preparative to such an inquiry as we are going to make
in the ensuing discourse. The passions I have mentioned are almost the only
ones which it can be necessary to consider in our present design; though the
variety of the passions is great, and worthy in every branch of that variety,
of an attentive investigation. The more accurately we search into the human
mind, the stronger traces we everywhere find of his wisdom who made it. If a
discourse on the use of the parts of the body may be considered as an hymn to
the Creator; the use of the passions, which are the organs of the mind, cannot
be barren of praise to him, nor unproductive to ourselves of that noble and
uncommon union of science and admiration, which a contemplation of the works of
infinite wisdom alone can afford to a rational mind: whilst, referring to him
whatever we find of right or good or fair in ourselves, discovering his
strength and wisdom even in our own weakness and imperfection, honouring them
where we discover them clearly, and adoring their profundity where we are lost
in our search, we may be inquisitive without impertinence, and elevated without
pride; we may be admitted, if I may dare to say so, into the counsels of the
Almighty by a consideration of his works. The elevation of the mind ought to be
the principal end of all our studies; which if they do not in some measure
effect, they are of very little service to us. But, beside this great purpose,
a consideration of the rationale of our passions seems to me very necessary for
all who would affect them upon solid and sure principles. It is not enough to know
them in general: to affect them after a delicate manner, or to judge properly
of any work designed to affect them, we should know the exact boundaries of
their several jurisdictions; we should pursue them through all their variety of
operations, and pierce into the inmost, and what might appear inaccessible,
parts of our nature,
Quod
latet arcand non enarrabile fibrâ.
Without
all this it is possible for a man, after a confused manner, sometimes to
satisfy his own mind of the truth of his work; but he can never have a certain
determinate rule to go by, nor can he ever make his propositions sufficiently
clear to others. Poets, and orators, and painters, and those who cultivate
other branches of the liberal arts, have, without this critical knowledge,
succeeded well in their several provinces, and will succeed: as among
artificers there are many machines made and even invented without any exact
knowledge of the principles they are governed by. It is, I own, not uncommon to
be wrong in theory, and right in practice; and we are happy that it is so. Men
often act right from their feelings, who afterwards reason but ill on them from
principle: but as it is impossible to avoid an attempt at such reasoning, and
equally impossible to prevent its having some influence on our practice, surely
it is worth taking some pains to have it just, and founded on the basis of sure
experience. We might expect that the artists themselves would have been our
surest guides; but the artists have been too much occupied in the practice: the
philosophers have done little; and what they have done, was mostly with a view
to their own schemes and systems: and as for those called critics, they have
generally sought the rule of the arts in the wrong place; they sought it among poems,
pictures, engravings, statues, and buildings. But art can never give the rules
that make an art. This is, I believe, the reason why artists in general, and
poets principally, have been confined in so narrow a circle: they have been
rather imitators of one another than of nature; and this with so faithful an
uniformity, and to so remote an antiquity, that it is hard to say who gave the
first model. Critics follow them, and therefore can do little as guides. I can
judge but poorly of anything, whilst I measure it by no other standard than
itself. The true standard of the arts is in every man¹s power; and an easy
observation of the most common, sometimes of the meanest, things in nature,
will give the truest lights, where the greatest sagacity and industry, that
slights such observation, must leave us in the dark, or, what is worse, amuse
and mislead us by false lights. In an inquiry it is almost everything to be
once in a right road. I am satisfied I have done but little by these
observations considered in themselves; and I never should have taken the pains
to digest them, much less should I have ever ventured to publish them, if I was
not convinced that nothing tends more to the corruption of science than to
suffer it to stagnate. These waters must be troubled, before they can exert
their virtues. A man who works beyond the surface of things, though he may be
wrong himself, yet he clears the way for others, and may chance to make even
his errors subservient to the cause of truth. In the following parts I shall
inquire what things they are that cause in us the affections of the sublime and
beautiful, as in this I have considered the affections themselves. I only
desire one favour,‹that no part of this discourse may be judged of by itself,
and independently of the rest; for I am sensible I have not disposed my
materials to abide the test of a captious controversy, but of a sober and even
forgiving examination, that they are not armed at all points for battle, but
dressed to visit those who are willing to give a peaceful entrance to truth.