登陆注册
4709100000141

第141章

"Papa is very ill to-day, Simmons tells me," said Davie, as Donal entered the schoolroom. "He says he has never seen him so ill. Oh, Mr. Grant, I hope he is not going to die!"

"I hope not," returned Donal--not very sure, he saw when he thought about it, what he meant; for if there was so little hope of his becoming a true man on this side of some awful doom, why should he hope for his life here?

"I wish you would talk to him as you do to me, Mr. Grant!" resumed Davie, who thought what had been good for himself must be good for everybody.

Of late the boy had been more than usual with his father, and he may have dropped some word that turned his father's thoughts toward Donal and his ways of thinking: however weak the earl's will, and however dull his conscience, his mind was far from being inactive.

In the afternoon the butler brought a message that his lordship would be glad to see Mr. Grant when school was over.

Donal found the earl very weak, but more like a live man, he thought, than he had yet seen him. He pointed to a seat, and began to talk in a way that considerably astonished the tutor.

"Mr. Grant," he began, with not a little formality, "I have known you long enough to believe I know you really. Now I find myself, partly from the peculiarity of my constitution, partly from the state of my health, partly from the fact that my views do not coincide with those of the church of Scotland, and there is no episcopal clergyman within reach of the castle--I find myself, I say, for these reasons, desirous of some conversation with you, more for the sake of identifying my own opinions, than in the hope of receiving from you what it would be unreasonable to expect from one of your years."

Donal held his peace; the very power of speech seemed taken from him: he had no confidence in the man, and nothing so quenches speech as lack of faith. But the earl had no idea of this distrust, never a doubt of his listener's readiness to take any position he required him to take. Experience had taught him as little about Donal as about his own real self.

"I have long been troubled," continued his lordship after a momentary pause, "with a question of which one might think the world must by this time be weary--which yet has, and always will have, extraordinary fascination for minds of a certain sort--of which my own is one: it is the question of the freedom of the will:--how far is the will free? or how far can it be called free, consistently with the notion of a God over all?"

He paused, and Donal sat silent--so long that his lordship opened the eyes which, the better to enjoy the process of sentence-making, he had kept shut, and half turned his head towards him: he had begun to doubt whether he was really by his bedside, or but one of his many visions undistinguishable by him from realities. Re-assured by the glance, he resumed.

"I cannot, of course, expect from you such an exhaustive and formed opinion as from an older man who had made metaphysics his business, and acquainted himself with all that had been said upon the subject; at the same time you must have expended a considerable amount of thought on these matters!"

He talked in a quiet, level manner, almost without inflection, and with his eyes again closed--very much as if he were reading a book inside him.

"I have had a good deal," he went on, "to shake my belief in the common ideas on such points.--Do you believe there is such a thing as free will?"

He ceased, awaiting the answer which Donal felt far from prepared to give him.

"My lord," he said at length, "what I believe, I do not feel capable, at a moment's notice, of setting forth; neither do I think, however unavoidable such discussions may be in the forum of one's own thoughts, that they are profitable between men. I think such questions, if they are to be treated at all between man and man, and not between God and man only, had better be discussed in print, where what is said is in some measure fixed, and can with a glance be considered afresh. But not so either do I think they can be discussed to any profit."

"What do you mean? Surely this question is of the first importance to humanity!"

"I grant it, my lord, if by humanity you mean the human individual.

But my meaning is, that there are many questions, and this one, that can be tested better than argued."

"You seem fond of paradox!"

"I will speak as directly as I can: such questions are to be answered only by the moral nature, which first and almost only they concern; and the moral nature operates in action, not discussion."

"Do I not then," said his lordship, the faintest shadow of indignation in his tone, "bring my moral nature to bear on a question which I consider from the ground of duty?"

"No, my lord," answered Donal, with decision; "you bring nothing but your intellectual nature to bear on it so; the moral nature, I repeat, operates only in action. To come to the point in hand: the sole way for a man to know he has freedom is to do something he ought to do, which he would rather not do. He may strive to acquaint himself with the facts concerning will, and spend himself imagining its mode of working, yet all the time not know whether he has any will."

"But how am I to put a force in operation, while I do not know whether I possess it or not?"

"By putting it in operation--that alone; by being alive; by doing the next thing you ought to do, or abstaining from the next thing you are tempted to, knowing you ought not to do it. It sounds childish; and most people set action aside as what will do any time, and try first to settle questions which never can be settled but in just this divinely childish way. For not merely is it the only way in which a man can know whether he has a free will, but the man has in fact no will at all unless it comes into being in such action."

"Suppose he found he had no will, for he could not do what he wished?"

"What he ought, I said, my lord."

"Well, what he ought," yielded the earl almost angrily.

同类推荐
  • 无门关

    无门关

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 差摩婆帝授记经

    差摩婆帝授记经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 梁武帝演义

    梁武帝演义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 明伦汇编人事典十一岁部

    明伦汇编人事典十一岁部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Ruling Passion

    The Ruling Passion

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 故事会(2018年5月上)

    故事会(2018年5月上)

    《故事会》是中国最通俗的民间文学小本杂志,是中国的老牌刊物之一。先后获得两届中国期刊的最高奖——国家期刊奖。1998年,它在世界综合类期刊中发行量排名第5。从1984年开始,《故事会》由双月刊改为月刊,2003年11月份开始试行半月刊,2004年正式改为半月刊。现分为红、绿两版,其中红版为上半月刊,绿版为下半月刊。
  • 你若盛开

    你若盛开

    七七是苏牧之的最后一个七,天气竟然那么好。她照例祭祀完毕,开始读那封信。她今天格外伤感,也许过了这个七,她会有段时间不能来看他了。而且照旧俗的说法,七七过后,人的灵魂就不能在人间随意游荡了。梅芸今天读信很慢,读着读着,突然有一片枯叶掉在信纸上,吓她一跳。梅芸抬头,看见头上的苹果树,树上落着许多积雪。那些积雪太厚了,甚至连树皮的罅隙里都钻满了,让人怀疑是否去年冬天的积雪仍旧在那里——那么,那么,梅芸知道自己今后会很少再来了,她不知怎么,突然想起了往日曾经产生的那个想法,那个去医院看他的长发女子是谁?那个和他在街上走路的长发女子又是谁呢?
  • 堂吉诃德(经典译林)

    堂吉诃德(经典译林)

    《堂吉诃德》取得如此高的评价是作者始料未及的。如果塞万提斯地下有知,看到人们把他看作是西班牙最伟大的文学巨匠,世界文坛的天才的话,定会大吃一惊。他同时代的人也会惊讶得目瞪口呆,因为在塞万提斯在世的那个时代他只被认为是一个平庸的诗人,没有成就的小说家。尽管他因写骑士历险的小说获得成功,但他却不属于任何高雅的文学沙龙。他一生生活贫困,经历坎坷。即使《堂吉诃德》成了畅销书,他仍处在穷困潦倒之中。然而,《堂吉诃德》的发表,以及这部作品产生的巨大影响却使塞万提斯在他死后逐渐成为世界文坛声名赫赫的经典作家,被狄更斯、福楼拜和托尔斯泰等作家誉为“现代小说之父”。
  • 机甲天王

    机甲天王

    神秘至宝,彪悍美女,狂野机甲,统统纳入怀中。且看李源,一个出自边疆家族的小小机甲兵,如何走出一条属于自己的路。又如何驾驭钢铁洪流,踏破银河,傲笑寰宇。成就不败巅峰。他,机甲天王,让万国来朝,让无数王牌俯首称臣。
  • 石器时代之酋长女

    石器时代之酋长女

    她莫名穿越到石器时代,成了某一个原始部落酋长的女儿。在这样一个什么都没有时代,想要生活得好些,就只能自己动手丰衣足食。制布、建房、引水、造车、做陶、煮蜡,寻药等等,只要是生活需要的东西,她全都能制作出来,只为提高自己的生活质量!这是一个神奇的世界,到处都是浓密的深林,参天的大树。从未见过的植物这里到处都是,各种奇怪的动物满林跑!在现代极为稀少的娃娃鱼,在这里竟然爬了满溪!这里都是刚毅,帅气的真男人,每天都会一丝不挂的裸露着强壮的身子在部落的小河里洗澡。她见多了,也就习惯了。这是一个特别温馨的宠文!
  • 挺进太空:中国载人航天纪事

    挺进太空:中国载人航天纪事

    本书由中华民族的飞天梦想写起,讲述了中国载人航天工程从决策到实施的全部过程,全面回顾了我国载人航天事业的起步、发展和辉煌的奋斗历程,生动再现了心怀梦想的中国航天人站在世界科技前沿、开拓进取,忘我奋斗,用勇气、智慧和力量,创造了跨越式发展的巨大成就,展现了我国几代航天科技工作者不畏艰辛、勇攀高峰、顽强拼搏、锐意创新的精神风貌和动人故事。本书既是普及航天科技知识的教科书,更是开展爱国主义教育的生动教材。
  • 大公主

    大公主

    “长”为尊,她是一代武帝的同胞长姐,拥有叱咤风云的帝王之才,她慧眼识人,危难时扭转乾坤。四岁时随母亲打入冷宫入住永巷,却凭“童言无忌”得以翻身。十岁时她已是心思细密,天真笑颜间,玩弄权术,助母亲登临后位,手掌六宫。十二岁,她巧施妙计,冷眼旁观又偶尔地推波助澜,冷眼相观,助一代武帝登基临朝。十四岁花嫁,巧笑焉兮,拜别宫闱,跟随夫号,却心有不甘。皇宫的冷漠和残忍铸就了她的无情,而也确实是她的无情,成就了汉宫!她一手调教了一代皇后,也彻底伤害了另一个女人。未央宫里豪门宴,长门宫内泣无天…谁还能记得那被贬长门之人?她就是……平阳长公主!《大公主》的视频相册:伊丫自己做的视频~吼一声~&pstyle=1&pstyle=1伊丫十分感谢雪玉萱琪的礼物哦~哇嘎嘎噶~~摁倒狂么!推荐伊丫的旧文《十两银妻千金妾》:(讲述一个小女人的故事。)《并蒂莲之冷酷王爷伤王妃》:(因为这文,伊丫被叫做后妈了……呜呜……)《妙恋小媳妇》:(迄今为止,伊丫唯一一篇现代都市的小白文,很清新的感觉……不像上面的两篇有浓重的感情色调,这是一篇会让你开心的文哦~)《蓝冰星魂》:(伊丫迄今为止唯一的一片玄幻文……那时候还是刚开始写文呢……恩恩,可以见证伊丫的成长了……)好友区:推荐好友的文~花糖《猫妖王妃》:桃花女王《错妻》:图图的文《邪帝冷妻》:(恭喜大封推~~)倾城《风云皇后》:(作者大大很火爆哦,女王气场的!)小惹《妖孽俏皇妃》:(这是皇上的文!)仰慕的文文《帅哥个个是极品默默地文《邪医》:风风的文哦《极品夫君好又多》雾中水晶的文强大的《红楼梦续之浴火凤凰》丫寨:63948515欢迎进入~~要挂连接的大大们可以到丫寨来找伊丫的,顺便给伊丫当个老婆……嘿嘿……
  • 别让不好意思害了你

    别让不好意思害了你

    一直来,我们推崇敦厚、谦让的品格,从小,父母一边潜移默化一边耳提面命地教育我们要谦让,要相信吃亏是福,从而导致了大部分人不好意思,所以遇事不争,委曲求全。随着时代的发展,目前社会越来越遵循丛林法则,适者生存,弱肉强食之下,不好意思已经是懦弱、无能、自卑的代名词。
  • 穿越空间之异能商女

    穿越空间之异能商女

    (新文《穿进年代文后我躺赢了》已经发布,求支持啊)孤儿院出身的叶烟,事业辉煌,名利双收时,却遭遇闺蜜和未婚夫的双重背叛。伤心难过下因救孕妇遭遇车祸而穿越。从此,空间异能在手。洗髓伐骨,学医术,修异能,开公司,积功德。苏皓宸,冷漠无双的面瘫,当他遇到她。一见钟情,高冷变温柔。企鹅群:970746404
  • 蒋勋说文学:从唐代散文到现代文学

    蒋勋说文学:从唐代散文到现代文学

    继《蒋勋说唐诗》《蒋勋说宋词》之后,蒋勋先生全面系统梳理中国文学脉络,以美学视角诠释从先秦到现代近三千年的中国文学之美。在本册中,蒋勋先生凭借深厚的美学功底及对现实生活的敏锐洞察,以平实的语言将唐代至现代中国文学中的经典作品娓娓道来,以文学特有的意境,观照当下人们的内心世界,帮助大家重拾对美与生命的感动。