登陆注册
5416500000010

第10章 Chapter I(10)

Mill had already received the appointment which decided the future course of his life.He was appointed to a clerkship in the India House,21st May 1823,having just finished his seventeenth year.He received successive promotions,till in 1856he became chief of the office with a salary of ?000a year.Mill gives his own view of the advantages of the position,Which to a man of his extraordinary power of work were unmistakable.He was placed beyond all anxiety as to bread-winning.He was not bound to make a living by his pen,and could devote himself to writing of permanent value.He was at the same time brought into close relation with the conduct of actual affairs;forced to recognise the necessity of compromise,and to study the art of instilling his thoughts into minds not specially prepared for their reception.Mill's books show how well he acquired this art.

Whatever their other merits or defects,they reconcile conditions too often conflicting;they are the product of mature reflection,and yet presented so as to be intelligible without special initiation.He is unsurpassable as an interpreter between the abstract philosopher and the man of common-sense.The duties were not such as to absorb his powers.Though his holidays were limited to a month,he could enjoy Sunday rambles in the country and pedestrian tours at home and abroad;and though conscientiously discharging his official duties,he managed to turn out as much other work as might have occupied the whole time of average men.The Utilitarians were beginning to make themselves felt in the press.Mill's first printed writings were some letters in the Traveller in 1822,defending Ricardo and James Mill against some criticism by Torrens.He then contributed three letters to the Morning Chronicle,denouncing the prosecution of Carlisle,which then excited the rightful wrath of the Utilitarians.Two letters in continuation were too outspoken to be published.(16)Mill contributed to the Westminster Review from its start in the spring of 1824,helping his father's assault upon the Edinburgh.He was,he says,the most frequent writer of all,and between the second and eighteenth number contributed thirteen reviews.They show that he was reading widely.An article upon Scott's Napoleon in 1828shows that he had fully made up his deficiencies as to the history of the French revolution.He had not,however,as yet attained his full powers of expression;and neither the style nor the arrangement of the matter has the merits of his later work.(17)The most remarkable by far is the review of Whately's Logic in January 1828.It shows some touches of youthful arrogance,though exceedingly complimentary to the author reviewed.But the knowledge displayed and the vigour of the expression are surprising in a youth of twenty-one;and it proves that Mill was already reflecting to some purpose upon the questions treated in his Logic.

While thus serving an apprenticeship to journalism,Mill was going through a remarkable mental training.About the beginning of 1825he undertook to edit Bentham's Rationale of Evidence.He says that this work 'occupied nearly all his leisure for about a year.'That such a task should have been accomplished by a youth of twenty in a year would seem marvellous even if he had been exclusively devoted to it.He had to condense large masses of Bentham's crabbed manuscript into a continuous treatise;to 'unroll'his author's involved and parenthetic sentences;to read the standard English textbooks upon evidence;to reply to reviewers of previous works of Bentham,and to add comments especially upon some logical points.Finally,he had to see,five large volumes through the press.'(18)That this was admirable practice,and that Mill's style became afterwards,markedly superior,to what it had been before,may be well believed.It is impossible,however,not to connect the fact that Mill had gone through this labour in 1825with the singular mental convulsion which followed in 1826.

He was,he says,in a,dull state of nerves,in the autumn of that year.It occurred to him to ask whether he would be happy supposing that all his objects in life could be realised.'An irrepressible consciousness distinctly answered "No."'The cloud would not pass away.He could think of no physician of the mind who could 'raze out the rooted trouble of the brain.'His father had no experience of such feeling,nor could he give the elder man the pain of thinking that all the educational plans had failed.The father's philosophy,indeed,both explained,and showed the hopelessness of,the evil.Feelings depend upon association.Analysis tends to destroy the associations,and therefore to 'wear away the feelings.'Happiness has for its main source the pleasure of sympathy with others.But the knowledge that the feeling would give happiness could not suffice to restore the feeling itself.It seemed to be impossible to set to work again and create new associations.Mill dragged on mechanically through the winter of 1826-27,and the gloom only gathered.He made up his mind that he could not bear life for more than a year.The first ray of hope came from a passage in which Marmontel describes his father's death and his resolution to make up the loss to his family.Gradually he recovered,though he suffered several relapses.He learned,he says,two lessons:first,that though happiness must be the end,it must not be the immediate or conscious end,of life.Ask whether you are happy and you will cease to be happy.Fix upon some end external to happiness,and happiness will be 'inhaled with the air you breathe.'And in the second place,he learned to make the 'cultivation of the feelings one of the cardinal points in his ethical and philosophical creed.'He could not,however,for some time apply his new doctrine to practice.He mentions as a quaint illustration of this period one ingenious mode of self-torment.

同类推荐
  • 秋日留别义初上人

    秋日留别义初上人

    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。
  • Captain Blood

    Captain Blood

    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。
  • 戒子益恩书

    戒子益恩书

    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。
  • 大音希声论

    大音希声论

    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。
  • 七真因果传

    七真因果传

    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
  • 刘少奇交往纪实

    刘少奇交往纪实

    刘少奇同志是位伟大的无产阶级革命家、政治家、理论家,党和国家主要领导人之一。刘少奇同志从青年时代起就立下拯救民族于危难之中的远大志向,曾积极响应五四反帝爱国运动号召,走上探索争取民族独立和人民解放的道路。他在新民主主义革命、社会主义革命和社会主义建设各个历史时期都作出了重大贡献,为党和人民建立了丰功伟绩,受到全党全军全国各族人民衷心爱戴。 书中通过与刘少奇有过交往的同志和人士,撰写的大量回忆录和文章,追述昔日交往中的轶闻、趣事,表现了刘少奇同志对党和国家一片赤诚之心。
  • 妈妈送给青春期女儿的书大全集

    妈妈送给青春期女儿的书大全集

    本书就是一本妈妈为女儿编写的“青春期百科全书”,从妈妈的角度来帮助女儿解决成长过程中发生的各种烦恼和问题,内容从生理变化到成长烦恼,从自我防卫到心理剖析,从学业指点到修养提升,从形象气质到礼仪交往,无所不包,是送给青春期女孩的成长礼物,帮助女儿度过一个安心快乐的青春期。同时也是天下父母必备的青春期教育实用指南,帮助父母与青春期女儿建立起沟通的桥梁,找到最恰当的方式来引导女儿健康成长。
  • 凰医帝临七神

    凰医帝临七神

    (原名《焚尽七神:狂傲女帝》)前世,她贵为巅峰女帝,一夕之间局势逆转,沦为废材之质。魂灵双修,医毒无双,血脉觉醒,一御万兽。天现异象,凰命之女,自此归来,天下乱之。这一次,所有欺她辱她之人必杀之!他自上界而来,怀有目的,却因她动摇内心深处坚定的道义。“你曾说,你向仰我,你想像我一样,步入光明,是我对不起你,又让你重新回到黑暗。”“你都不在了,你让我一个人,怎么像向仰你?!”爱与不爱,从来都是我们自己的事,与他人无关。带走了所有的光明与信仰。
  • 华娱截胡王

    华娱截胡王

    一本披着华娱外皮的商场文。前世混混噩噩的周亮,醉酒之后回到了99年。面对前妻无理的取闹,他不再犹豫,他要活出一个不样的人生。在他外出旅游的火车上,遇到了一个女孩。那次的偶遇让俩人的内心产生了一道涟漪,让他与她的生活轨迹发生了变化,爱神之箭不知在何时射中了他们俩,他与她在缤纷炫丽的时代中携手成长……
  • 练气飞仙

    练气飞仙

    从太乙道又一次招收新弟子那天起,杨邺的故事也跟着开始了。紧接着,偌大的九洲荡起风云,神秘的魔出世,远古洞府现踪,守卫九洲的十方道统也重现人寰。一切的一切都是为了飞仙。也有人问:飞仙,有那么重要吗?有!无数前仆后继的大能者,用鲜血告知,并发出血的战吼。
  • 帝国的崛起鼎盛与堕落

    帝国的崛起鼎盛与堕落

    世界上突然出现了吃人的巨人,经过血战人类以失败,人类修建了高大的城墙,抵抗巨人!城墙是人类最后的希望!
  • 佛说善恶因果经

    佛说善恶因果经

    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。
  • 重生之相公别傲娇

    重生之相公别傲娇

    新书《全能天后很难撩》已发,望多多捧场投资!重生前,他总是追着她问道:小仆人,你喜欢我吗?她总是四处躲避的说:不喜欢,你这个弱鸡!婚后他将她圈在床上问道:我是弱鸡吗?她哭着说不是重生后,她总是追着他问:方大少,你喜欢我吗?他斜眼看着她的胸说:太平公主,不喜欢!她色眯眯的笑着说:没事,你多努努力它会长大的。于是,他将她圈在床上说:是这样吗?可是它没什么变化呀!她哭着说:相公咱能不这么傲娇吗?既然上天又给了她一次机会,那么这一世就换她来护他可好?只是令她没有想到的是前世她以为的结束,只是今生故事的开始,而这场阴谋似乎比她想象中的更为巨大。。。。。。
  • 何妨相爱(全本)

    何妨相爱(全本)

    好友出版文:《宝贝,爱永不迟》http://m.pgsk.com/a/396683/******【风尚阁】告诉你,阅读是一件美丽的事情:http://m.pgsk.com/fengshang/******你知道吗?有这样的爱情,在日复一日中,也会变成将就。这就是痒……如果真爱,又何妨相爱!最爱的那个人不一定能陪你生活一辈子。他们相识一共六年,结婚三年,从最初的热恋到后来的貌合神离。一场不被任何人看好的感情,最终果然是被人言重,从高高的云端,掉入了深深的地狱。要如何拯救这段在婚姻中渐渐迷失的感情;要如何挽救这两个明明互相深爱却越走越远的爱人……******她是个极其普通的女子,却偏偏遇见了那么不普通的他,说是幸运,还不如说是命运!曾经的他不为任何女人而停留,却偏偏看上了那么普通的她,说是缘分,还不如说是命运!因为命运,当她碰上他,会有怎样的火花?******【顾意】说:梁子辰,和你在一起,我很累。我原本以为我们能相爱一辈子,原来,还是我太过天真了。【梁子辰】说:顾意,你给我听清楚了,我永远不会放开你,就算是痛苦也好,我也要我们纠缠一辈子!
  • 汉世祖

    汉世祖

    穿越后汉隐帝刘承祐,辅弼创立江山。其后以尚幼之年,嗣新造之业,保延洪之运,守不拔之基。PS:若不是父兄死得早,这也许会是个再世李二。