 Japanese Translation of The Conquest of Happiness (with English text)
Japanese Translation of The Conquest of Happiness (with English text) The Problems of Philosophy, 1912 (full text)
The Problems of Philosophy, 1912 (full text) Our Knowledge of the External World, 1914 (full text Under Construction!)
Our Knowledge of the External World, 1914 (full text Under Construction!) On Education, especially in early childhood, 1926 (full text)
On Education, especially in early childhood, 1926 (full text) Marriage and Morals, 1929 (full text)
Marriage and Morals, 1929 (full text) Bertrand Russell's American Essays, v.1
Bertrand Russell's American Essays, v.1 The Aurobiography of Bertrand Russell
The Aurobiography of Bertrand Russell Religion and Science, 1935 (full text)
Religion and Science, 1935 (full text) Power, a new social analysis, 1938 (full text)
Power, a new social analysis, 1938 (full text) Bertrand Russell: The Triumph of Stupidity
Bertrand Russell: The Triumph of Stupidity Bertrand Russell's Vocaburaries
Bertrand Russell's Vocaburaries Bertrand Russell Quotes 366 with images
Bertrand Russell Quotes 366 with images|  | |
| これをアマゾンで購入 | 
A mark in every face I meet,
Marks of weakness, marks of woe,
|  Bertrand Russell Quotes 366 | 
|  ラッセル英単語・熟語1500 | 
There's not a joy the world can give like that it takes away,The author of Ecclesiastes says.
When the glow of early thought declines in feeling's dull decay.
Wherefore I praised the dead which are already dead more than the living which are yet alive.All these three pessimists arrived at these gloomy conclusions after reviewing the pleasures of life. Mr. Krutch has lived in the most intellectual circles of New York; Byron swam the Hellespont and had innumerable love affairs; the author of Ecclesiastes was even more varied in his pursuit of pleasure; he tried wine, he tried music, "and that of all sorts," he built pools of water, he had men-servants and maid-servants, and servants born in his house. Even in these circumstances his wisdom departed not from him. Nevertheless he saw that all is vanity, even wisdom.
Yea, better is he than both they, which hath not yet been, who hath not seen the evil work that is done under the sun.
And I gave my heart to know wisdom, and to know madness and folly: I perceived that this also is vexation of spirit.His wisdom seems to have annoyed him; he made unsuccessful efforts to get rid of it.
For in much wisdom is much grief: and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.
I said in mine heart, Go to now, I will prove thee with mirth, therefore enjoy pleasure: and, behold, this also is vanity.But his wisdom remained with him.
Then said I in my heart, As it happeneth to the fool, so it happeneth even to me; and why was I then more wise.? Then I said in my heart, that this also is vanity....
Therefore I hated life; because the work that is wrought under the sun is grievous unto me: for all is vanity and vexation of spirit.
 It is fortunate for literary men that people no longer read anything written long ago, for if they did they would come to the conclusion that, whatever may be said about pools of water, the making of new books is certainly vanity.  If we can show that the doctrine of Ecclesiastes is not the only one open to a wise man, we need not trouble ourselves much with the later expressions of the same mood.
It is fortunate for literary men that people no longer read anything written long ago, for if they did they would come to the conclusion that, whatever may be said about pools of water, the making of new books is certainly vanity.  If we can show that the doctrine of Ecclesiastes is not the only one open to a wise man, we need not trouble ourselves much with the later expressions of the same mood.  The rivers run into the sea; yet the sea is not full.If one were to attempt to set up these arguments in the style of a modern philosopher they would come to something like this: Man is perpetually toiling, and matter is perpetually in motion yet nothing abides, although the new thing that comes after it is in no way different from what has gone before. A man dies, and his heir reaps the benefits of his labours; the rivers run into the sea, but their waters are not permitted to stay there. Over and over again in an endless purposeless cycle men and things are born and die without improvement, without permanent achievement, day after day, year after year. The rivers, if they were wise, would stay where they are. Solomon, if he were wise, would not plant fruit trees of which his son is to enjoy the fruit.
There is no new thing under the sun.
There is no remembrance of former things.
I hated all my labour which I had taken under the sun: because
I should leave it unto the man that shall be after me.
I warmed both hands before the fire;This attitude is quite as rational as that of indignation with death. If, therefore, moods were to be decided by reason, there would be quite as much reason for cheerfulness as for despair.
It sinks, and I am ready to depart.
'For the more skeptical of the Victorians, love performed some of the functions of the God whom they had lost. Faced with it, many of even the most hard-headed turned, for the moment, mystical. They found themselves in the presence of something which awoke in them that sense of reverence which nothing else claimed, and something to which they felt, even in the very depth of their being, that an unquestioning loyalty was due. For them love, like God, demanded all sacrifices; but like Him, also, it rewarded the believer by investing all the phenomena of life with a meaning not yet analysed away. We have grown used - more than they - to a Godless universe, but we are not yet accustomed to one which is loveless as well, and only when we have so become shall we realise what atheism really means.'It is curious how different the Victorian age looks to the young of our time from what it seemed when one was living in it. I remember two old ladies both typical of certain aspects of the period, whom I knew well in my youth. One was a Puritan, and the other a Voltairean. The former regretted that so much poetry deals with love, which, she maintained, is an uninteresting subject. The latter remarked :
'Nobody can say anything against me, but I always say that it is not so bad to break the seventh commandment as the sixth, because at any rate it requires the consent of the other party.'Neither of these views was quite like what Mr. Krutch presents as typically Victorian. His ideas are derived evidently from certain writers who were by no means in harmony with their environment. The best example, I suppose, is Robert Browning. I cannot, however, resist the conviction that there is something stuffy about love as he conceived it.
God be thanked, the meanest of His creaturesThis assumes that combativeness is the only possible attitude towards the world at large. Why? Because the world is cruel, Browning would say. Because it will not accept you at your own valuation, we should say. A couple may form, as the Brownings did, a mutual admiration society. It is very pleasant to have someone at hand who is sure to praise your work, whether it deserves it or not. And Browning undoubtedly felt that he was a fine, manly fellow when he denounced Fitzgerald in no measured terms for having dared not to admire Aurora Leigh. I cannot feel that this complete suspension of the critical faculty on both sides is really admirable. It is bound up with fear and with the desire to find a refuge from the cold blasts of impartial criticism. Many old bachelors learn to derive the same satisfaction from their own fireside.
Boasts two soul-sides, one to face the world with,
One to show a woman when he loves her!
Oh Love! they wrong thee muchThe anonymous author of these lines was not seeking a solution for atheism, or a key to the universe; he was merely enjoying himself. And not only is love a source of delight, but its absence is a source of pain.
That say thy sweet is bitter,
When thy rich fruit is such
As nothing can be sweeter.
True love is a durable fire,I come next to what Mr. Krutch has to say about tragedy. He contends, and in this I cannot but agree with him, that Ibsen's Ghosts is inferior to King Leer. 'No increased powers of expression, no greater gift for words, could have transformed Ibsen into Shakespeare. The materials out of which the latter created his works - his conception of human dignity, his sense of the importance of human passions, his vision of the amplitude of human life - simply did not and could not exist for lbsen, as they did not and could not exist for his contemporaries. God and Man and Nature had all somehow dwindled in the course of the intervening centuries, not because the realistic creed of modern art led us to seek out mean people, but because this meanness of human life was somehow thrust upon us by the operation of that same process which led to the development of realistic theories of art by which our vision could be justified:' It is undoubtedly the case that the old-fashioned kind of tragedy which dealt with princes and their sorrows is not suitable to our age, and when we try to treat in the same manner the sorrows of an obscure individual the effect is not the same. The reason for this is not, however, any deterioration in our outlook on life, but quite the reverse. It is due to the fact that we can no longer regard certain individuals as the great ones of the earth, who have a right to tragic passions, while all the rest must merely drudge and toil to produce the magnificence of those few. Shakespeare says:
In the mind ever burning,
Never sick, never dead, never cold,
From itself never turning.
When beggars die, there are no comets seen;
The heavens themselves blaze forth the death of princes.
 In Shakespeare's day this sentiment, if not literally believed, at least expressed an outlook which was practically universal and most profoundly accepted by Shakespeare himself.  Consequently the death of Cinna the poet is comic, whereas the deaths of Caesar, Brutus and Cassius are tragic.  The cosmic significance of an individual death is lost to us because we have become democratic, not only in outward forms, but in our inmost convictions.  High tragedy in the present day, therefore, has to concern itself rather with the community than with the individual.
In Shakespeare's day this sentiment, if not literally believed, at least expressed an outlook which was practically universal and most profoundly accepted by Shakespeare himself.  Consequently the death of Cinna the poet is comic, whereas the deaths of Caesar, Brutus and Cassius are tragic.  The cosmic significance of an individual death is lost to us because we have become democratic, not only in outward forms, but in our inmost convictions.  High tragedy in the present day, therefore, has to concern itself rather with the community than with the individual.   If you ask any man in America, or any man in business in England, what it is that most interferes with his enjoyment of existence, he will say: 'The struggle for life.'  He will say this in all sincerity; he will believe it.  In a certain sense it is true; yet in another, and that a very important sense, it is profoundly false.  The struggle for life is a thing which does, of course, occur.  It may occur to any of us if we are unfortunate.  It occurred, for example, to Conrad's hero Falk, who found himself on a derelict ship, one of the two men among the crew who were possessed of fire-arms, with nothing to eat but the other men,  When the two men had finished the meals upon which they could agree, a true struggle for life began.  Falk won, but was ever after a vegetarian.
If you ask any man in America, or any man in business in England, what it is that most interferes with his enjoyment of existence, he will say: 'The struggle for life.'  He will say this in all sincerity; he will believe it.  In a certain sense it is true; yet in another, and that a very important sense, it is profoundly false.  The struggle for life is a thing which does, of course, occur.  It may occur to any of us if we are unfortunate.  It occurred, for example, to Conrad's hero Falk, who found himself on a derelict ship, one of the two men among the crew who were possessed of fire-arms, with nothing to eat but the other men,  When the two men had finished the meals upon which they could agree, a true struggle for life began.  Falk won, but was ever after a vegetarian.   Consider the life of such a man.  He has, we may suppose, a charming house, a charming wife, and charming children.  He wakes up early in the morning while they are still asleep and hurries off to his office.  There it is his duty to display the qualities of a great executive; he cultivates a firm jaw, a decisive manner of speech, and an air of sagacious reserve calculated to impress everybody except the office boy.  He dictates letters, converses with various important persons on the 'phone, studies the market, and presently has lunch with some person with whom he is conducting or hoping to conduct a deal.  The same sort of thing goes on all the afternoon.  He arrives home, tired, just in time to dress for dinner.  At dinner he and a number of other tired men have to pretend to enjoy the company of ladies who have no occasion to feel tired yet.  How many hours it may take the poor man to escape it is impossible to foresee.  At last he sleeps, and for a few hours the tension is relaxed.
Consider the life of such a man.  He has, we may suppose, a charming house, a charming wife, and charming children.  He wakes up early in the morning while they are still asleep and hurries off to his office.  There it is his duty to display the qualities of a great executive; he cultivates a firm jaw, a decisive manner of speech, and an air of sagacious reserve calculated to impress everybody except the office boy.  He dictates letters, converses with various important persons on the 'phone, studies the market, and presently has lunch with some person with whom he is conducting or hoping to conduct a deal.  The same sort of thing goes on all the afternoon.  He arrives home, tired, just in time to dress for dinner.  At dinner he and a number of other tired men have to pretend to enjoy the company of ladies who have no occasion to feel tired yet.  How many hours it may take the poor man to escape it is impossible to foresee.  At last he sleeps, and for a few hours the tension is relaxed. 

 Take a simple matter, such as investments.  Almost every American would sooner get 8 per cent from a risks investment than 4 per cent from a safe one.  The consequence is that there are frequent losses of money and continual worry and fret.  For my part, the thing that I would wish to obtain from money would be leisure with security.  But what the typical modern man desires to get with it is more money, with a view to ostentation, splendour, and the outshining of those who have hitherto been his equals.  The social scale in America is indefinite and continually fluctuating.  Consequently all the snobbish emotions become more restless than they are where the social order is fixed, and although money in itself may not suffice to make people grand, it is difficult to be grand without money.  Moreover, money made is the accepted measure of brains.  A man who makes a lot of money is a clever fellow; a man who does not, is not.  Nobody likes to be thought a fool.  Therefore, when the market is in ticklish condition, a man feels the way young people feel during an examination.
Take a simple matter, such as investments.  Almost every American would sooner get 8 per cent from a risks investment than 4 per cent from a safe one.  The consequence is that there are frequent losses of money and continual worry and fret.  For my part, the thing that I would wish to obtain from money would be leisure with security.  But what the typical modern man desires to get with it is more money, with a view to ostentation, splendour, and the outshining of those who have hitherto been his equals.  The social scale in America is indefinite and continually fluctuating.  Consequently all the snobbish emotions become more restless than they are where the social order is fixed, and although money in itself may not suffice to make people grand, it is difficult to be grand without money.  Moreover, money made is the accepted measure of brains.  A man who makes a lot of money is a clever fellow; a man who does not, is not.  Nobody likes to be thought a fool.  Therefore, when the market is in ticklish condition, a man feels the way young people feel during an examination.
 However that may be, the prodigious success of these modern dinosaurs, who, like their prehistoric prototypes, prefer power to intelligence, is causing them to be universally imitated: they have become the pattern of the white man everywhere, and this is likely to be increasingly the case for the next hundred years.  Those, however, who are not in the fashion may take comfort from the thought that the dinosaurs did not ultimately triumph; they killed each other out, and intelligent bystanders inherited their kingdom.  Our modern dinosaurs are killing themselves out.  They do not, on the average, have so much as two children per marriage; they do not enjoy life enough to wish to beget  children. At this point the unduly strenuous philosophy which they have carried over from their Puritan forefathers shows itself unadapted to the world.  Those whose outlook on life causes them to feel so little happiness that they do not care to beget children are biologically doomed.  Before very long they must be succeeded by something gayer and jollier.
 However that may be, the prodigious success of these modern dinosaurs, who, like their prehistoric prototypes, prefer power to intelligence, is causing them to be universally imitated: they have become the pattern of the white man everywhere, and this is likely to be increasingly the case for the next hundred years.  Those, however, who are not in the fashion may take comfort from the thought that the dinosaurs did not ultimately triumph; they killed each other out, and intelligent bystanders inherited their kingdom.  Our modern dinosaurs are killing themselves out.  They do not, on the average, have so much as two children per marriage; they do not enjoy life enough to wish to beget  children. At this point the unduly strenuous philosophy which they have carried over from their Puritan forefathers shows itself unadapted to the world.  Those whose outlook on life causes them to feel so little happiness that they do not care to beget children are biologically doomed.  Before very long they must be succeeded by something gayer and jollier.  All this weight of boredom should be borne in mind in estimating the world of a hundred years ago, and when one goes further into the past the boredom becomes still worse.  Imagine the monotony of winter in a mediaeval village.  People could not read or write, they had only candles to give them light after dark, the smoke of their one fire filled the only room that was not bitterly cold.  Roads were practically impassable, so that one hardly ever saw anybody from another village.  It must have been boredom as much as anything that led to the practice of witch-hunts as the sole sport by which winter evenings could be enlivened.
All this weight of boredom should be borne in mind in estimating the world of a hundred years ago, and when one goes further into the past the boredom becomes still worse.  Imagine the monotony of winter in a mediaeval village.  People could not read or write, they had only candles to give them light after dark, the smoke of their one fire filled the only room that was not bitterly cold.  Roads were practically impassable, so that one hardly ever saw anybody from another village.  It must have been boredom as much as anything that led to the practice of witch-hunts as the sole sport by which winter evenings could be enlivened.  Girls nowadays earn their own living, very largely because this enables them to seek excitement in the evening and to escape 'the happy family time' that their grandmothers had to endure.  Everybody who can lives in a town; in America, those who cannot, have a car, or at the least a motor-bicycle, to take them to the movies.  And of course they have the radio in their houses.  Young men and young women meet each other with much less difficulty than was formerly the case, and every housemaid expects at least once a week as much excitement as would have lasted a Jane Austen heroine throughout a whole novel.
Girls nowadays earn their own living, very largely because this enables them to seek excitement in the evening and to escape 'the happy family time' that their grandmothers had to endure.  Everybody who can lives in a town; in America, those who cannot, have a car, or at the least a motor-bicycle, to take them to the movies.  And of course they have the radio in their houses.  Young men and young women meet each other with much less difficulty than was formerly the case, and every housemaid expects at least once a week as much excitement as would have lasted a Jane Austen heroine throughout a whole novel.   Now what applies to drugs applies also, within limits, to every kind of excitement.  A life too full of excitement is an exhausting life, in which continually stronger stimuli are needed to give the thrill that has come to be thought an essential part of pleasure.  A person accustomed to too much excitement is like a person with a morbid craving for pepper, who comes last to be unable even to taste a quantity of pepper which would cause anyone else to choke.  There is an element of boredom which is inseparable from the avoidance of too much excitement, and too much excitement not only undermines the health, but dulls the palate for every kind of pleasure, substituting titillations for profound organic satisfactions, cleverness for wisdom, and jagged surprises for beauty.  I do not want to push to extremes the objection to excitement.  A certain amount of it is wholesome, but, like almost everything else, the matter is quantitative.  Too little may produce morbid cravings, too much will produce exhaustion.  A certain power of enduring boredom is therefore essential to a happy life, and is one of the things that ought to be taught to the young.
Now what applies to drugs applies also, within limits, to every kind of excitement.  A life too full of excitement is an exhausting life, in which continually stronger stimuli are needed to give the thrill that has come to be thought an essential part of pleasure.  A person accustomed to too much excitement is like a person with a morbid craving for pepper, who comes last to be unable even to taste a quantity of pepper which would cause anyone else to choke.  There is an element of boredom which is inseparable from the avoidance of too much excitement, and too much excitement not only undermines the health, but dulls the palate for every kind of pleasure, substituting titillations for profound organic satisfactions, cleverness for wisdom, and jagged surprises for beauty.  I do not want to push to extremes the objection to excitement.  A certain amount of it is wholesome, but, like almost everything else, the matter is quantitative.  Too little may produce morbid cravings, too much will produce exhaustion.  A certain power of enduring boredom is therefore essential to a happy life, and is one of the things that ought to be taught to the young.'My dear sir,' he would say, 'this chapter lacks pep; you can't expect your reader to be interested in a mere string of proper names of persons about whom you tell him so little. You have begun your story, I will admit, in fine style, and at first I was very favourably impressed, but you have altogether too much wish to tell it all. Pick out the highlights, take out the superfluous matter, and bring me back your manuscript when you have reduced it to a reasonable length.'So the modern publisher would speak, knowing the modern reader's fear of boredom. He would say the same sort of thing about the Confucian classics, the Koran, Marx's Capital, and all the other sacred books which have proved to be bestsellers. Nor does this apply only to sacred books. All the best novels contain boring passages. A novel which sparkles from the first page to the last is pretty sure not to be a great book. Nor have the lives of great men been exciting except at a few great moments. Socrates could enjoy a banquet now and again, and must have derived considerable satisfaction from his conversations while the hemlock was taking effect, but most of his life he lived quietly with Xanthippe, taking a constitutional in the afternoon, and perhaps meeting a few friends by the way. Kant is said never to have been more than ten miles from Konigsberg in all his life. Darwin, after going round the world, spent the whole of the rest of his life in his own house. Marx, after stirring up a few revolutions, decided to spend the remainder of his days in the British Museum. Altogether it will be found that a quiet life is characteristic of great men, and that their pleasures have not been of the sort that would look exciting to the outward eye. No great achievement is possible without persistent work, so absorbing and so difficult that little energy is left over for the more strenuous kinds of amusement, except such as serve to recuperate physical energy during holidays, of which Alpine climbing may serve as the best example.
 The kind of fatigue that is most serious in the present day in advanced communities is nervous fatigue.  This kind, oddly enough, is most pronounced among the well-to-do, and tends to be much less among wage-earners than it is among business men and brain-workers.
The kind of fatigue that is most serious in the present day in advanced communities is nervous fatigue.  This kind, oddly enough, is most pronounced among the well-to-do, and tends to be much less among wage-earners than it is among business men and brain-workers.  The important kind of fatigue is always emotional in modern life; purely intellectual fatigue, like purely muscular fatigue, produces its own remedy in sleep.  Any person who has a great deal of intellectual work, devoid of emotion, to do - say, for example, elaborate computations - will sleep off at the end of each day the fatigue that that day has brought.  The harm that is attributed to overwork is hardly ever due to that cause, but to some kind of worry or anxiety.  The trouble with emotional fatigne is that it interferes with rest. The more tired a man becomes, the more impossible he finds it to stop.  One of the symptoms of approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that one's work is terribly important, and that to take a holiday would bring all kinds of disaster.  If I were a medical man, I should prescribe a holiday to any patient who considered his work important.  The nervous breakdown which appears to be produced by the work is, in fact, in every case that I have ever known of personally, produced by some emotional trouble from which the patient attempts to escape by means of his work.  He is loath to give up his work because, if he does so, he will no longer have anything to distract him from the thoughts of his misfortune, whatever it may be.  Of course, the trouble may be fear of bankruptcy, and in that case his work is directly connected with his worry, but even then worry is likely to lead him to work so long that his judgement becomes clouded and bankruptcy comes sooner than if he worked less.  In every case it is the emotional trouble, not the work, that causes the breakdown.
The important kind of fatigue is always emotional in modern life; purely intellectual fatigue, like purely muscular fatigue, produces its own remedy in sleep.  Any person who has a great deal of intellectual work, devoid of emotion, to do - say, for example, elaborate computations - will sleep off at the end of each day the fatigue that that day has brought.  The harm that is attributed to overwork is hardly ever due to that cause, but to some kind of worry or anxiety.  The trouble with emotional fatigne is that it interferes with rest. The more tired a man becomes, the more impossible he finds it to stop.  One of the symptoms of approaching nervous breakdown is the belief that one's work is terribly important, and that to take a holiday would bring all kinds of disaster.  If I were a medical man, I should prescribe a holiday to any patient who considered his work important.  The nervous breakdown which appears to be produced by the work is, in fact, in every case that I have ever known of personally, produced by some emotional trouble from which the patient attempts to escape by means of his work.  He is loath to give up his work because, if he does so, he will no longer have anything to distract him from the thoughts of his misfortune, whatever it may be.  Of course, the trouble may be fear of bankruptcy, and in that case his work is directly connected with his worry, but even then worry is likely to lead him to work so long that his judgement becomes clouded and bankruptcy comes sooner than if he worked less.  In every case it is the emotional trouble, not the work, that causes the breakdown.  A very frequent source of fatigue is love of excitement.  If a man could spend his leisure in sleep, he would keep fit, but his working hours are dreary, and he feels the need of pleasure during his hours of freedom.  The trouble is that the pleasures which are easiest to obtain and most superficially attractive are mostly of a sort to wear out the nerves.  Desire for excitement, when it goes beyond a point, is a sign either of a twisted disposition or of some instinctive dissatisfaction.  In the early days of a happy marriage most men feel no need of excitement, but in the modern world marriage often has to be postponed for such a long time that when at last it becomes financially possible excitement has become a habit which can only be kept at bay for a short time.  If public opinion allowed men to marry at twenty-one without incurring the financial burdens at present involved in matrimony, many men would never get into the way of demanding pleasures as fatiguing as their work.  To suggest that this should be made possible is, however, immoral, as may be seen from the fate of Judge Lindsey, who has suffered obloquy, in spite of a long and honourable career, for the sole crime of wishing to save young people from the misfortunes that they incur as a result of their elders' bigotry.  I shall not, however, pursue this topic any further at present, since it comes under the heading of Envy, with which we shall be concerned in a later chapter.
A very frequent source of fatigue is love of excitement.  If a man could spend his leisure in sleep, he would keep fit, but his working hours are dreary, and he feels the need of pleasure during his hours of freedom.  The trouble is that the pleasures which are easiest to obtain and most superficially attractive are mostly of a sort to wear out the nerves.  Desire for excitement, when it goes beyond a point, is a sign either of a twisted disposition or of some instinctive dissatisfaction.  In the early days of a happy marriage most men feel no need of excitement, but in the modern world marriage often has to be postponed for such a long time that when at last it becomes financially possible excitement has become a habit which can only be kept at bay for a short time.  If public opinion allowed men to marry at twenty-one without incurring the financial burdens at present involved in matrimony, many men would never get into the way of demanding pleasures as fatiguing as their work.  To suggest that this should be made possible is, however, immoral, as may be seen from the fate of Judge Lindsey, who has suffered obloquy, in spite of a long and honourable career, for the sole crime of wishing to save young people from the misfortunes that they incur as a result of their elders' bigotry.  I shall not, however, pursue this topic any further at present, since it comes under the heading of Envy, with which we shall be concerned in a later chapter.  For the private individual, who cannot alter the laws and  institutions under which he lives, it is difficult to cope with the situation that oppressive moralists created and perpetuate.  It is, however, worth while to realise that exciting pleasures are not a road to happiness, although so long as more satisfying joys remain unattainable a man may find it hardly possible to endure life except by the help of excitement.  In such a situation the only thing that a prudent man can do is to ration himself, and not to allow himself such an amount of fatiguing pleasure as will undermine his health or interfere with his work.  The radical cure for the troubles of the young lies in a change of public morals.  In the meantime a young man does well to reflect that he will ultimately be in a position to marry, and that he will be unwise if he lives in such a way as to make a happy marriage impossible, which may easily happen through frayed nerves and an acquired incapacity for the gentler pleasures.
For the private individual, who cannot alter the laws and  institutions under which he lives, it is difficult to cope with the situation that oppressive moralists created and perpetuate.  It is, however, worth while to realise that exciting pleasures are not a road to happiness, although so long as more satisfying joys remain unattainable a man may find it hardly possible to endure life except by the help of excitement.  In such a situation the only thing that a prudent man can do is to ration himself, and not to allow himself such an amount of fatiguing pleasure as will undermine his health or interfere with his work.  The radical cure for the troubles of the young lies in a change of public morals.  In the meantime a young man does well to reflect that he will ultimately be in a position to marry, and that he will be unwise if he lives in such a way as to make a happy marriage impossible, which may easily happen through frayed nerves and an acquired incapacity for the gentler pleasures.   Envy is the basis of democracy.  Heraclitus asserts that the citizens of Ephesus ought all to be hanged because they said, 'there shall be none first among us'. The democratic movement in Greek States must have been almost wholly inspired by this passion.  And the same is true of modern democracy.  There is, it is true, an idealistic theory according to which democracy is the best form of government. I think myself that this theory is true.  But there is no department of practical politics where idealistic theories are strong enough to cause great changes; when great changes occur, the theories which justify them are always a camouflage for passion.  And the passion that has given driving force to democratic theories is undoubtedly the passion of envy.   Read the memoirs of Madame Roland, who is frequently represented as a noble woman inspired by devotion to the people.  You will find that what made her such a vehement democrat was the experience of being shown into the servants' hall when she had occasion to visit an aristocratic chateau.
Envy is the basis of democracy.  Heraclitus asserts that the citizens of Ephesus ought all to be hanged because they said, 'there shall be none first among us'. The democratic movement in Greek States must have been almost wholly inspired by this passion.  And the same is true of modern democracy.  There is, it is true, an idealistic theory according to which democracy is the best form of government. I think myself that this theory is true.  But there is no department of practical politics where idealistic theories are strong enough to cause great changes; when great changes occur, the theories which justify them are always a camouflage for passion.  And the passion that has given driving force to democratic theories is undoubtedly the passion of envy.   Read the memoirs of Madame Roland, who is frequently represented as a noble woman inspired by devotion to the people.  You will find that what made her such a vehement democrat was the experience of being shown into the servants' hall when she had occasion to visit an aristocratic chateau. In the correspondence of Leibniz and Huyghens there are a number of letters lamenting the supposed fact that Newton had become insane.  'Is it not sad,' they write to each other, 'that the incomparable genius of Mr. Newton should have become overclouded by the loss of reason?'  And these two eminent men, in one letter after another, wept crocodile tears with obvious relish.  As a matter of fact, the event which they were hypocritically lamenting had not taken place, though a few examples of eccentric behaviour had given rise to the rumour.
In the correspondence of Leibniz and Huyghens there are a number of letters lamenting the supposed fact that Newton had become insane.  'Is it not sad,' they write to each other, 'that the incomparable genius of Mr. Newton should have become overclouded by the loss of reason?'  And these two eminent men, in one letter after another, wept crocodile tears with obvious relish.  As a matter of fact, the event which they were hypocritically lamenting had not taken place, though a few examples of eccentric behaviour had given rise to the rumour.  What cure is there for envy?  For the saint there is the cure of selflessness, though even in the case of saints envy of other saints is by no means impossible.  I doubt whether St Simeon Stylites would have been wholly pleased if he had learnt of some other saint who had stood even longer on an even narrower pillar.   But, leaving saints out of account, the only cure for envy in the case of ordinary men and women is happiness, and the difficulty is that envy is itself a terrible obstacle to happiness.  I think envy is immensely promoted by misfortunes in childhood.  The child who finds a brother or sister preferred before himself acquires the habit of envy, and when he goes out into the world looks for injustices of which he is the victim, perceives them at once if they occur, and imagines them if they do not.  Such a man is inevitably unhappy, and becomes a nuisance to his friends, who cannot be always remembering to avoid imaginary slights.  Having begun by believing that no one likes him, he at last by his behaviour makes his belief true.  Another misfortune in childhood which has the same result is to have parents without much parental feeling. Without having an unduly favoured brother or sister, a child may perceive that the children in other families are more loved by their mother and father than he is.  This will cause him to hate the other children and his own parents, and when he grows up he will feel himself an Ishmael.  Some kinds of happiness are everyone's natural birthright, and to be deprived of them is almost inevitably to become warped and embittered.
What cure is there for envy?  For the saint there is the cure of selflessness, though even in the case of saints envy of other saints is by no means impossible.  I doubt whether St Simeon Stylites would have been wholly pleased if he had learnt of some other saint who had stood even longer on an even narrower pillar.   But, leaving saints out of account, the only cure for envy in the case of ordinary men and women is happiness, and the difficulty is that envy is itself a terrible obstacle to happiness.  I think envy is immensely promoted by misfortunes in childhood.  The child who finds a brother or sister preferred before himself acquires the habit of envy, and when he goes out into the world looks for injustices of which he is the victim, perceives them at once if they occur, and imagines them if they do not.  Such a man is inevitably unhappy, and becomes a nuisance to his friends, who cannot be always remembering to avoid imaginary slights.  Having begun by believing that no one likes him, he at last by his behaviour makes his belief true.  Another misfortune in childhood which has the same result is to have parents without much parental feeling. Without having an unduly favoured brother or sister, a child may perceive that the children in other families are more loved by their mother and father than he is.  This will cause him to hate the other children and his own parents, and when he grows up he will feel himself an Ishmael.  Some kinds of happiness are everyone's natural birthright, and to be deprived of them is almost inevitably to become warped and embittered.  All such comparisons are pointless and foolish; whether the Queen of Sheba or our next-door neighbour be the cause of discontent, either is equally futile.  With the wise man, what he has does not cease to be enjoyable because someone else has something else.  Envy, in fact, is one form of a vice, partly moral, partly intellectual, which consists in seeing things never in themselves, but only in their relations.  I am earning, let us say, a salary sufficient for my needs.  I should be content, but I hear that someone else whom I believe to be in no way my superior is earning a salary twice as great as mine.  Instantly, if I am of an envious disposition, the satisfactions to be derived from what I have grow dim, and I begin to be eaten up with a sense of injustice.
All such comparisons are pointless and foolish; whether the Queen of Sheba or our next-door neighbour be the cause of discontent, either is equally futile.  With the wise man, what he has does not cease to be enjoyable because someone else has something else.  Envy, in fact, is one form of a vice, partly moral, partly intellectual, which consists in seeing things never in themselves, but only in their relations.  I am earning, let us say, a salary sufficient for my needs.  I should be content, but I hear that someone else whom I believe to be in no way my superior is earning a salary twice as great as mine.  Instantly, if I am of an envious disposition, the satisfactions to be derived from what I have grow dim, and I begin to be eaten up with a sense of injustice.   For my part, I think there is much to be said for bringing up a boy to think himself a fine fellow.  I do not believe that any peacock envies another peacock his tail, because every peacock is persuaded that his own tail is the finest in the world.  The consequence of this is that peacocks are peaceable birds.  Imagine how unhappy the life of a peacock would be if he had been taught that it is wicked to have a good opinion of oneself.  Whenever he saw another peacock spreading out his tail, he would say to himself:
For my part, I think there is much to be said for bringing up a boy to think himself a fine fellow.  I do not believe that any peacock envies another peacock his tail, because every peacock is persuaded that his own tail is the finest in the world.  The consequence of this is that peacocks are peaceable birds.  Imagine how unhappy the life of a peacock would be if he had been taught that it is wicked to have a good opinion of oneself.  Whenever he saw another peacock spreading out his tail, he would say to himself: 
'I must not imagine that my tail is better than that, for that would be conceited, but oh, how I wish it were! That odious bird is so convinced of his own magnificence! Shall I pull out some of his feathers? And then perhaps I need no longer fear comparison with him.'Or perhaps he would lay a trap for him, and prove that he was a wicked peacock who had been guilty of unpeacockly behaviour, and he would denounce him to the assembly of the leaders. Gradually he would establish the principle that peacocks with specially fine tails are almost always wicked, and that the wise ruler in the peacock kingdom would seek out the humble bird with only a few draggled tail feathers. Having got this principle accepted, he would get all the finest birds put to death, and in the end a really splendid tail will become only a dim memory of the past. Such is the victory of envy masquerading as morality. But where every peacock thinks himself more splendid than any of the others, there is no need for all this repression. Each peacock expects to win the first prize in the competition, and each, because he values his own peahen, believes that he has done so.
 The word 'conscience' covers. as a matter of fact, several different feelings; the simplest of these is the fear of being found out.   You, reader, have, I am sure, lived a completely blameless life, but if you will ask someone who has at some time acted in a manner for which he would be punished if it became known, you will find that, when discovery seemed imminent, the person in question repented of his crime.  I do not say that this would apply to the professional thief who expects a certain amount of prison as a trade risk, but it applies to what may be called the respectable offender, such as the Bank Manager who has embezzled in a moment of stress, or the clergyman who has been tempted by passion into some sensual irregularity.  Such men can forget their crime when there seems little chance of detection, but when they are found out, or in grave danger of being so, they wish they had been more virtuous, and this wish may give them a lively sense of the enormity of their sin.  Closely allied with this feeling is the fear of becoming an outcast from the herd.  A man who cheats at cards or fails to pay his debts of honour has nothing within himself by which to stand up against the disapproval of the herd when he is found out.  In this he is unlike the religious innovator, the anarchist, and the revolutionary, who all feel that, whatever may be their fate in the present, the future is with them and will honour them as much as they are execrated in the present.  These men, in spite of the hostility of the herd, do not feel sinful, but the man who entirely accepts the morality of the herd while acting against it suffers great unhappiness when he loses caste, and the fear of this disaster, or the pain of it when it has happened, may easily cause him to regard his acts themselves as sinful.
The word 'conscience' covers. as a matter of fact, several different feelings; the simplest of these is the fear of being found out.   You, reader, have, I am sure, lived a completely blameless life, but if you will ask someone who has at some time acted in a manner for which he would be punished if it became known, you will find that, when discovery seemed imminent, the person in question repented of his crime.  I do not say that this would apply to the professional thief who expects a certain amount of prison as a trade risk, but it applies to what may be called the respectable offender, such as the Bank Manager who has embezzled in a moment of stress, or the clergyman who has been tempted by passion into some sensual irregularity.  Such men can forget their crime when there seems little chance of detection, but when they are found out, or in grave danger of being so, they wish they had been more virtuous, and this wish may give them a lively sense of the enormity of their sin.  Closely allied with this feeling is the fear of becoming an outcast from the herd.  A man who cheats at cards or fails to pay his debts of honour has nothing within himself by which to stand up against the disapproval of the herd when he is found out.  In this he is unlike the religious innovator, the anarchist, and the revolutionary, who all feel that, whatever may be their fate in the present, the future is with them and will honour them as much as they are execrated in the present.  These men, in spite of the hostility of the herd, do not feel sinful, but the man who entirely accepts the morality of the herd while acting against it suffers great unhappiness when he loses caste, and the fear of this disaster, or the pain of it when it has happened, may easily cause him to regard his acts themselves as sinful. The only man that e'er I knew
Who did not make me almost spew
Was Fuseli: he was both Turk and Jew.
And so, dear Christian friends, how do you do?
 While it is desirable that the old should treat with respect the wishes of the young, it is not desirable that the young should treat bin a few years;  they may mention whole strings of horrid examples of young persons who have been rash enough to do what you contemplate doing and came to a bad end in consequence.  They may of course be right in thinking that the stage is not the career for you; it may be that you have no talent for acting, or that you have a bad voice.  If this is the case, however, you will soon discover it from theatrical people, and there will still be plenty of timw to adopt a different career.  The arguments of parents should not be a sufficient reason for relinquishiug the attempt.  If, in spite of all they say, you carry out your intention, they will soon come round, much sooner in fact than either you or they suppose.  If on the other hand you find professional opinion discouraging,  that is another matter, for professional opinion must always be treated with respect by beginners.
While it is desirable that the old should treat with respect the wishes of the young, it is not desirable that the young should treat bin a few years;  they may mention whole strings of horrid examples of young persons who have been rash enough to do what you contemplate doing and came to a bad end in consequence.  They may of course be right in thinking that the stage is not the career for you; it may be that you have no talent for acting, or that you have a bad voice.  If this is the case, however, you will soon discover it from theatrical people, and there will still be plenty of timw to adopt a different career.  The arguments of parents should not be a sufficient reason for relinquishiug the attempt.  If, in spite of all they say, you carry out your intention, they will soon come round, much sooner in fact than either you or they suppose.  If on the other hand you find professional opinion discouraging,  that is another matter, for professional opinion must always be treated with respect by beginners. 
 In this chapter I propose to deal with what seems to me the most universal and distinctive mark of happy men, namely zest.
In this chapter I propose to deal with what seems to me the most universal and distinctive mark of happy men, namely zest.  Those who are set down before the feast of life have similar attitudes towards the good things which it offers.  The happy man corresponds to the last of our eaters.   What hunger is in relation to food, zest is in relation to iife.   The man who is bored with his meals corresponds to the victim of Byronic unhappiness.  The invalid who eats from a sense of duty corresponds to the ascetic, the gormandiser to the voluptuary.  The epicure corresponds to the fastidious person who condemns half the pleasures of life as unaesthetic.  Oddly enough, all these types, with the possible exception of the gormandiser, feel contempt for the man of healthy appetite and consider themselves his superior.  It seems to them vulgar to enjoy food because you are hungry or to enjoy life because it offers a variety of interesting spectacles and surprising experiences.  From the height of their disillusionment they look down upon those whom they despise as simple souls.  For my part I have no sympathy with this outlook.  All disenchantment is to me a malady, which, it is true, certain circumstances may render inevitable, but which none the less, when it occurs, is to be cured as soon as possible, not to be regarded as a higher form of wisdom.
Those who are set down before the feast of life have similar attitudes towards the good things which it offers.  The happy man corresponds to the last of our eaters.   What hunger is in relation to food, zest is in relation to iife.   The man who is bored with his meals corresponds to the victim of Byronic unhappiness.  The invalid who eats from a sense of duty corresponds to the ascetic, the gormandiser to the voluptuary.  The epicure corresponds to the fastidious person who condemns half the pleasures of life as unaesthetic.  Oddly enough, all these types, with the possible exception of the gormandiser, feel contempt for the man of healthy appetite and consider themselves his superior.  It seems to them vulgar to enjoy food because you are hungry or to enjoy life because it offers a variety of interesting spectacles and surprising experiences.  From the height of their disillusionment they look down upon those whom they despise as simple souls.  For my part I have no sympathy with this outlook.  All disenchantment is to me a malady, which, it is true, certain circumstances may render inevitable, but which none the less, when it occurs, is to be cured as soon as possible, not to be regarded as a higher form of wisdom.  

 Zest is sometimes general, sometimes specialised.  It may be very specialised indeed.  Readers of Borrow may remember a character who occurs in Romany Rye.  He had lost his wife, to whom he was devoted, and felt for a time that life had grown utterly barren.  But he became interested in Chinese inscriptions on teapots and tea-chests, and by the aid of a French Chinese grammar, after learning French for the purpose, gradually managed to decipher them, thereby acquiring a new interest in life though he never used his Chinese knowledge for other purposes.  I have known men who were entirely absorbed in the endeavour to find out all about the Gnostic heresy, and other men whose principal interest lay in collating the manuscripts and early editions of Hobbes.  It is quite impossible to guess in advance what will interest a man, but most men are capable of a keen interest in something or other, and when once such an interest has been aroused their life becomes free from tedium.  Very specialised interests are, however, a less satisfactory source of happiness than a general zest for life, since they can hardly fill the whole of a man's time, and there is always the danger that he may come to know all there is to know about the particular matter that has become his hobby.
Zest is sometimes general, sometimes specialised.  It may be very specialised indeed.  Readers of Borrow may remember a character who occurs in Romany Rye.  He had lost his wife, to whom he was devoted, and felt for a time that life had grown utterly barren.  But he became interested in Chinese inscriptions on teapots and tea-chests, and by the aid of a French Chinese grammar, after learning French for the purpose, gradually managed to decipher them, thereby acquiring a new interest in life though he never used his Chinese knowledge for other purposes.  I have known men who were entirely absorbed in the endeavour to find out all about the Gnostic heresy, and other men whose principal interest lay in collating the manuscripts and early editions of Hobbes.  It is quite impossible to guess in advance what will interest a man, but most men are capable of a keen interest in something or other, and when once such an interest has been aroused their life becomes free from tedium.  Very specialised interests are, however, a less satisfactory source of happiness than a general zest for life, since they can hardly fill the whole of a man's time, and there is always the danger that he may come to know all there is to know about the particular matter that has become his hobby.  The man who likes chess sufficiently to look forward throughout his working day to the game that he will play in the evening is fortunate, but the man who gives up work in order to play chess all day has lost the virtue of moderation.  It is recorded that Tolstoy, in his younger and unregenerate days, was awarded the military cross for valour in the field, but when the time came for him to be presented with it, he was so absorbed in a game of chess that he decided not to go.  We can hardly find fault with Tolstoy on this account, since to him it might well be a matter of indifference whether he won military decorations or not, but in a lesser man such an act would have been one of folly.
The man who likes chess sufficiently to look forward throughout his working day to the game that he will play in the evening is fortunate, but the man who gives up work in order to play chess all day has lost the virtue of moderation.  It is recorded that Tolstoy, in his younger and unregenerate days, was awarded the military cross for valour in the field, but when the time came for him to be presented with it, he was so absorbed in a game of chess that he decided not to go.  We can hardly find fault with Tolstoy on this account, since to him it might well be a matter of indifference whether he won military decorations or not, but in a lesser man such an act would have been one of folly.  It is affection received, not affection given, that causes this sense of security, though it arises most of all from affection which is reciprocal.  Strictiy speaking, it is not only affection but also admiration that has this effect.  Persons whose trade is to secure public admiration, such as actors, preachers, speakers, and politicians, come to depend more and more upon applause.  When they receive their due meed of public approbation their life is full of zest; when they do not, they become discontented and self-centred.  The diffused goodwill of a multitude does for them what is done for others by the more concentrated affection of the few.  The child whose parents are fond of him accepts their affection as a law of nature.  He does not think very much about it, although it is of great importance to his happiness.  He thinks about the world, about the adventures that come his way and the more marvelous adventures that will come his way when he is grown up.  But behind all these external interests there is the feeling that he will be protected from disaster by parental affection.   The child from whom for any reason parental affection is withdrawn is likely to become timid and unadventurous, filled with fears and self-pity, and no longer able to meet the world in a mood of gay exploration.  Such a child may set to work at a surprisingly early age to meditate on life and death and human destiny.  He becomes an introvert, melancholy at first, but seeking ultimately the unreal consolations of some system of philosophy or theology.  The world is a higgledy-piggledy place, containing things pleasant and things unpleasant in haphazard sequence.  And the desire to make an intelligible system or pattern out of it is at bottom an outcome of fear, in fact a kind of agoraphobia or dread of open spaces.  Within the four walls of his library the timid student feels safe.  If he can persuade himself that the universe is equally tidy, he can feel almost equally safe when he has to venture forth into the streets.  Such a man, if he had received more affection, would have feared the real world less, and would not have had to invent an ideal world to take its place in his beliefs.
It is affection received, not affection given, that causes this sense of security, though it arises most of all from affection which is reciprocal.  Strictiy speaking, it is not only affection but also admiration that has this effect.  Persons whose trade is to secure public admiration, such as actors, preachers, speakers, and politicians, come to depend more and more upon applause.  When they receive their due meed of public approbation their life is full of zest; when they do not, they become discontented and self-centred.  The diffused goodwill of a multitude does for them what is done for others by the more concentrated affection of the few.  The child whose parents are fond of him accepts their affection as a law of nature.  He does not think very much about it, although it is of great importance to his happiness.  He thinks about the world, about the adventures that come his way and the more marvelous adventures that will come his way when he is grown up.  But behind all these external interests there is the feeling that he will be protected from disaster by parental affection.   The child from whom for any reason parental affection is withdrawn is likely to become timid and unadventurous, filled with fears and self-pity, and no longer able to meet the world in a mood of gay exploration.  Such a child may set to work at a surprisingly early age to meditate on life and death and human destiny.  He becomes an introvert, melancholy at first, but seeking ultimately the unreal consolations of some system of philosophy or theology.  The world is a higgledy-piggledy place, containing things pleasant and things unpleasant in haphazard sequence.  And the desire to make an intelligible system or pattern out of it is at bottom an outcome of fear, in fact a kind of agoraphobia or dread of open spaces.  Within the four walls of his library the timid student feels safe.  If he can persuade himself that the universe is equally tidy, he can feel almost equally safe when he has to venture forth into the streets.  Such a man, if he had received more affection, would have feared the real world less, and would not have had to invent an ideal world to take its place in his beliefs.The only art her guilt to cover,
To hide her shame from ev'ry eye,
To give repentance to her lover
And wring his bosom is - to die.
Upon Paul's steeple stands a tree
As full of apples as may be,
The little boys of London town
They run with sticks to knock them down.
And then they run from hedge to hedge
Until they come to London Bridge.
 Paul's steeple is gone, and I do not know at what date the hedges disappeared between St Paul's and London Bridge.  It is many centuries since the little boys of London town could enjoy such pleasures as this rhyme suggests, but until not so very long ago the bulk of the population lived in the country.  The towns were not very vast; it was easy to get out of them, and by no means uncommon to find gardens attached to many houses in them.  Nowadays there is in England an immense preponderance of the urban over the rural population.  In America this preponderance is as yet slight, but it is very rapidly increasing.  Cities like London and New York are so large that it takes a very long time to get out of them.  Those who live in the city usually have to be content with a flat, to which, of course, not a square inch of soil is attached, and in which people of moderate means have to be content with the absolute minimum of space.  If there are young children, life in a flat is difficult.  There is no room for them to play, and there is no room for their parents to get away from their noise.  Consequently professional men tend more and more to live in the suburbs.  This is undoubtedly desirable from the point of view of the children, but it adds considerably to the fatigue of the man's life, and greatly diminishes the part which he can play in the family.
Paul's steeple is gone, and I do not know at what date the hedges disappeared between St Paul's and London Bridge.  It is many centuries since the little boys of London town could enjoy such pleasures as this rhyme suggests, but until not so very long ago the bulk of the population lived in the country.  The towns were not very vast; it was easy to get out of them, and by no means uncommon to find gardens attached to many houses in them.  Nowadays there is in England an immense preponderance of the urban over the rural population.  In America this preponderance is as yet slight, but it is very rapidly increasing.  Cities like London and New York are so large that it takes a very long time to get out of them.  Those who live in the city usually have to be content with a flat, to which, of course, not a square inch of soil is attached, and in which people of moderate means have to be content with the absolute minimum of space.  If there are young children, life in a flat is difficult.  There is no room for them to play, and there is no room for their parents to get away from their noise.  Consequently professional men tend more and more to live in the suburbs.  This is undoubtedly desirable from the point of view of the children, but it adds considerably to the fatigue of the man's life, and greatly diminishes the part which he can play in the family.  Work, therefore, is desirable, first and foremost, as a preventive of boredom, for the boredom that a man feels when he is doing necessary though uninteresting work is as nothing in comparison with the boredom that he feels when he has nothing to do with his days. With this advantage of work another is associated, namely that it makes holidays much more delicious when they come.  Provided a man does not have to work so hard as to impair his vigour, he is likely to find far more zest in his free time than an idle man could possibly find.
Work, therefore, is desirable, first and foremost, as a preventive of boredom, for the boredom that a man feels when he is doing necessary though uninteresting work is as nothing in comparison with the boredom that he feels when he has nothing to do with his days. With this advantage of work another is associated, namely that it makes holidays much more delicious when they come.  Provided a man does not have to work so hard as to impair his vigour, he is likely to find far more zest in his free time than an idle man could possibly find.