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READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
LIFE OF VOLTAIRE ( 1694-1778)
CHAPTER II.
Voltairism may be said to have begun from the flight of its
founder from Paris to London. This, to borrow a name from the most memorable
instance of outward change marking inward revolution, was the decisive hegira,
from which the philosophy of destruction in a formal shape may be held
seriously to date. Voltaire landed in England in the middle of May, 1726. He
was in the thirty-third year of his age, that earlier climacteric, when the men
with vision first feel conscious of a past, and reflectively mark its shadow.
It is then that they either press forward eagerly with new impulse in the way
of their high calling, knowing the limitations of circumstance and hour, or
else fainting draw back their hand from the plough, and ignobly leave to
another or to none the accomplishment of the work. The narrowness of the
cribbed deck that we are doomed to tread, amid the vast space of an eternal sea
with fair shores dimly seen and never neared, oppresses the soul with a burden
that sorely tries its strength, when the fixed limits first define themselves
before it. Those are the strongest who do not tremble beneath this gray ghostly
light, but make it the precursor of an industrious day.
The past on
which Voltaire had to look back was full of turmoil, contention, impatience,
and restless production. François Marie Arouet was
born in 1694, so feeble in constitution that, as in the case of Fontenelle,
whose hundred years surpassed even Voltaire’s lengthy span, his life was long
despaired of. His father was a notary of good repute for integrity and skill,
and was entrusted with the management of their affairs by several of the
highest families in France. His mother is supposed to have had some of the
intellectual alertness which penetrated the character of her son, but she died
when he was seven years old, and he remained alone with his father until 1704,
when he was sent to school. His instructors at the College Louis-le-Grand were
the Jesuits, whose wise devotion to intellectual education in the broadest
sense that was then possible, is a partial set-off against their mischievous
influence on morals and politics. The hardihood of the young Arouet’s temper broke out even from the first, and we need
not inquire minutely what were the precise subjects of education of a child,
whom his tutor took an early opportunity of pointing out as the future
coryphaeus of deism in France. He used to say in after life that he had learnt
nothing worth learning. A lad who could launch infidel epigrams at ‘his
Jansenist of a brother,’ and declaim a poem in which so important a hero as
Moses figures as an impostor, was of that originality of mental
turn on whose freedom the inevitably mechanical instruction of the school
cannot be expected to make any deep or decisive impression. The young of this independent humour begin their education where those of less
energetic nerve hardly leave off, with character readymade.
Between a
youth of bold, vivacious, imaginative disposition, and a father of the
temperament proper to a notary with many responsibilities, there could be no
sympathy, and the two were not long in coming to open quarrel without terms.
The son was taken out by his godfather, the abbé Châteauneuf, into that gay world which presently became the
infamous world of the regency, where extraordinary sprightliness and facility
in verse gained him welcome and patronage. We need waste no words on the
corruption and intellectual trifling of the society into which Voltaire was
thus launched. For shallowness and levity, concealed by literary artifice and
play of frivolous wit which only makes the scene more dreary or detestable, it
has never been surpassed. There was brightness in it, compared with the heavy
brutality and things obscene of the court of Lewis XV., but after all we seem
to see over the brightness a sort of foul glare, like the iridescence of
putrefaction. Ninon de l’Enclos, a friend of his
mother’s, was perhaps the one free and honest soul with whom the young Arouet had to do. Now extremely old, she still preserved
both her wit and her fine probity of intellect. She had always kept her heart
free of cant, from the time when she had ridiculed, as the Jansenists of love,
the pedantical women and platonic gallants of the Hôtel Rambouillet,
down to her rejection of Madame de Maintenon’s offer of an invitation to the
court, on condition of her joining the band of the devout. The veteran Aspasia,
now over eighty, was struck by the brilliance and dazzling promise of the young
versifier, and left him a legacy for the purchase of books.
The rest of
the society into which Voltaire was taken was saturated with a spirit of
reaction against the austere bigotry of the court, and bad and miserable as
such austerity is, the rebellion against it is always worse and more miserable
still. The licence seems not to have been of the most
joyous sort, as indeed licence protesting and defiant
is not apt to be. The abbé Chaulieu,
a versifier of sprightly fancy, grace, and natural ease, was the dissolute
Anacreon of the people of quality who during the best part of the reign of
Lewis XIV. had failed to sympathise with its nobility
and stateliness, and during the worst part revolted against its gloom. Voltaire
at twenty was his intimate and his professed disciple. To this intimacy we may
perhaps trace that remarkable continuity of tradition between Voltaire and the
grand age, which distinguishes him from the school of famous men who were
called Voltaireans, and of whom the special mark was
that they had absolutely broken with the whole past of French history and
literature. Princes, dukes, and marquises were of Chaulieu’s band. The despair and fury of the elder Arouet at
such companions and such follies reproduce once more a very old story in the
records of youthful genius. Genius and fine friends reconcile no prudent notary
to a son’s hatred for law and the desk. Orgies with the Duke of Sully, and
rhyming bouts with Chaulieu, have sunk into small
size for us, who know that they were but the mischievous and unbecoming
prologue of a life of incessant and generous labour,
but we may well believe that such enormities bulked big in the vision of the
father, as portents of degradation and ruin. We have a glimpse of the son’s
temper towards the profession to which his father had tried so hard to bind
him, in the ironical definition, thrown out long afterwards, of an avocat as
a man who, not having money enough to buy one of those brilliant offices on
which the universe has its eyes fixed, studies for three years the laws of
Theodosius and Justinian so as to know the custom of Paris, and who at length
having got matriculated has the right of pleading for money, if he has a loud
voice. The young Arouet did actually himself get
matriculated and acquire this right, but his voice proved so loud that his
pleadings were destined to fill wider courts than those of Paris.
Arouet the elder persuaded Châteauneuf’s brother,
who was a diplomatist, to take into his company the law-student who had made
verse instead of studying the laws of Theodosius. So the youth went to the
Hague. Here he straightway fell into new misadventure by conceiving an undying
passion, that lasted several weeks, for a young countrywoman whom he found in
Holland. Stolen interviews, letters, tears, and the other accustomed
circumstances of a juvenile passion on which the gods frown, were all
discovered. The ambassador sent the refractory boy back to his father, with
full details and documents, with results on the relations of the pair that need
not be described.
In the autumn
of 1715 Lewis XIV. died, and the Regent D’Orleans reigned
in his stead. There presently appeared some pungent lines, entitled Les j’ai vu, in which the writer recounted a number
of evil things which he had seen in the state—a thousand prisons crowded with
brave citizens and faithful subjects, the people groaning under rigorous
bondage, the magistrates harassing every town with ruinous taxes and
unrighteous edicts; j’ai vu, c’est dire tout, le Jésuite adoré. The last line ran that all these ills the writer
had seen, yet was but twenty years old. Voltaire was twenty-two, but the
authorities knew him for a verse-writer of biting turn, so they treated the
discrepancy of age as a piece of mere prosopopœia,
and laid him up in the Bastille (1716). As a matter of fact, he had no hand in
the offence. Even amid these sombre shades, where he
was kept for nearly a year, his spirit was blithe and its fire unquenchable.
The custom of
Paris and the Codes were as little handled as ever; and he divided his time
between the study of the two great epics of Greece and Rome, and the
preparation of what he designed to be the great epic of France. He also gave
the finishing strokes to his tragedy of Œdipe, which
was represented in the course of the following year with definite success, and
was the opening of a brilliant dramatic career, that perhaps to a mortal of
more ordinary mould might alone have sufficed for the
glory of a life.
The next six
years he divided between a lively society, mostly of the great, the assiduous
composition of new plays, and the completion of the Henriade.
His fibre was gradually strengthening. By the end of
this period, the recklessness of the boyish disciple of Chaulieu had wholly spent itself; and although Voltaire’s manner of life was assuredly
not regular nor decorously ordered, now nor for many years to come, if measured
by the rigid standard on which an improved society properly insists, yet it was
always a life of vigorous industry and clear purposes. For a brief time his
passion for the Maréchale de Villars broke the
tenacity of his diligence, and he always looked back on this interruption of
his work with the kind of remorse that might afflict a saint for a grave
spiritual backsliding. He was often at the country seats of Sully, Villars, and
elsewhere, throwing off thousands of trifling verses, arranging theatricals,
enlivening festivals, and always corresponding indefatigably; for now and
throughout his life his good sense and good will, his business-like quality and
his liking for his friends, both united to raise him above the idle pretences and self-indulgence of those who neglect the
chief instrument of social intercourse and friendly continuity. He preferred
the country to the town. ‘I was born,’ he says to one, ‘to be a faun or
creature of the woods; I am not made to live in a town.’ To another, ‘I fancy
myself in hell, when I am in the accursed city of Paris.’ The only
recommendation of the accursed city was that a solitude was attainable in it,
as in other crowded spots, which enabled him to work better there than in the
small and exacting throng of country-houses. ‘I fear Fontainebleau, Villars,
and Sully, both for my health and for Henry IV; I should do no work, I should
over-eat, and I should lose in pleasures and in complaisance to others an
amount of precious time that I ought to be using for a necessary and creditable
task.’
Yet there was
even at this period much of that marvellous hurrying
to and fro in France and out of it, which continued
to mark the longer portion of Voltaire’s life, and fills it with such a busy
air of turmoil and confusion, explaining many things, when we think of the
stability of life and permanence of outward place of the next bright spirit
that shone upon Europe. Goethe never saw London, Paris, nor Vienna, and made no
journey save the famous visit to Italy, and the march at Valmy. Voltaire moved
hither and thither over the face of Europe like the wind, and it is not until
he has passed through half of his life that we can begin to think of his home.
Every association that belongs to his name recalls tumult and haste and shrill
contention with men and circumstance. We have, however, to remember that these
constant movements were the price which Voltaire paid for the vigour and freedom of his speech, in days when the party of
superstition possessed the ear of the temporal power, and resorted without
sparing to the most violent means of obliterating every hardy word and crushing
every independent writer. The greater number of Voltaire’s ceaseless changes of
place were flights from injustice, and the recollection of this may well soothe
the disturbance of spirit of the most fastidious zealot for calm and orderly
living. They were for the most part retreats before packs of wolves.
In 1722 the
elder Arouet died, to the last relentlessly set
against a son, not any less stubborn than himself, and unfortunately a great
deal more poetical. About the same time the name of Arouet falls away, and the poet is known henceforth by that ever famous symbol for so
much, Voltaire; a name for which various explanations, none of them satisfactory,
have been offered, the latest and perhaps the least improbable resolving it
into a fanciful anagram.
Industrious
as he was, and eager as he was for rural delights and laborious solitude,
Voltaire was still pre-eminently social. His letters disclose in him, who
really possessed all arts, the art of one who knew how to be graciously
respectful to the social superiors who took him for a companion, without
forgetting what was due to his own respect for himself. We are all princes or
poets, he exclaimed jubilantly on the occasion of one of those nights and
suppers of the gods. Such gay-hearted freedom was not always well taken, and in
time Voltaire’s eyes were opened to the terms on which he really stood. ‘Who
is the young man who talks so loud?’ called out some Chevalier Rohan,
at one of these sprightly gatherings at the house of the Duke of Sully. ‘My
lord,’ the young man replied promptly, ‘he is one who does not carry
about a great name, but wins respect for the name he has.’ A few days
afterwards the high-spirited patrician magnanimously took an opportunity of
having a caning inflicted by the hands of his lackeys on the poet who had
thrown away this lesson upon him. Voltaire, who had at all events that
substitute for true physical courage which springs up in an intensely irritable
and susceptive temperament, forthwith applied himself to practise with the small-sword. He did his best to sting his enemy to fight, but the
chevalier either feared the swordsman, or else despised an antagonist of the middle
class; and by the influence of the Rohan family the poet once more found
himself in the Bastille, then the house of correction at the disposal and for
the use of the nobles, the court, and the clergy. Here for six months Voltaire,
then only representing a very humble and unknown quantity in men’s minds,
chafed and fretted. The pacific Fleury, as is the wont of the pacific when in
power, cared less to punish the wrong-doer than to avoid disturbance, knowing
that disturbance was most effectually avoided by not meddling with the person
most able to resent. The multitude, however, when the day of reckoning came,
remembered all these things, and the first act of their passion was to raze to
the ground the fortress into which nearly every distinguished champion of the
freedom of human intelligence among them had at one time or another been
tyrannically thrown.
On his
release Voltaire was ordered to leave Paris. A clandestine visit to the city
showed him that there was no hope of redress from authority, which was in the
hands of men whose pride of rank prevented them from so much as even
perceiving, much more from repairing, such grievance as a mere bourgeois could
have: as if, to borrow Condorcet’s bitter phrase, a descendant of the
conquering Franks, like De Rohan, could have lost the ancient right of life and
death over a descendant of the Gauls. And this was no ironic taunt; for
while Voltaire was in the Bastille, that astounding book of the Count of Boulainvilliers was in the press, in which it was shown that
the feudal system is the master-work of the human mind, and that the advance of
the royal authority and the increase of the liberties of the people were
equally unjust usurpations of the rights of the conquering Franks.
Voltaire was
no patient victim of the practice which corresponded to this trim historic
theory. In a tumult of just indignation he quitted France, and sought refuge
with that stout and free people, who had by the execution of one king, the
deposition of another, and the definite subjugation of the hierarchy, won a
full liberty of thought and speech and person. A modern historian has drawn up
a list of the men of mark who made the same invigorating pilgrimage. ‘During
the two generations which elapsed between the death of Lewis XIV. and the
outbreak of the Revolution, there was hardly a Frenchman of eminence who did
not either visit England or learn English; while many of them did both.’ Among
those who actually came to England and mixed in its society besides Voltaire,
were Buffon, Brissot, Helvétius, Gournay, Jussieu,
Lafayette, Montesquieu, Maupertuis, Morellet,
Mirabeau, Roland and Madame Roland, Rousseau. We who live after Wordsworth,
Shelley, Byron, Scott, have begun to forget the brilliant group of the Queen
Anne men. They belong to a self-complacent time, and we to a time of doubt and
unsatisfied aspiration, and the two spirits are unsympathetic. Yet they were
assuredly a band, from Newton and Locke down to Pope, of whom, taking them for
all the qualities which they united, in science, correct judgment, love of
letters, and taste, England has as good reason to be proud as of any set of
contemporary writers in her history.
Up to this
moment Voltaire had been a poet, and his mind had not moved beyond the region
of poetic creation. He had beaten every one once and for all on the ground of
light and graceful lyric verse, ‘a kind of poetry,’ says a French critic whose
word in such a matter we can hardly refuse to take, ‘in which Voltaire is at
once with us the only master and the only writer supportable, for he is the
only one whom we can read.’ He had produced three tragedies. His epic was
completed, though undergoing ceaseless labour of the
file. Two lines in his first play had served to mark him for no friend to the
hierophants:
Nos prêtres ne
sont point ce qu’un vain peuple pense;
Notre crédulité
fait toute leur science.
And the words
of Araspe in the same play had breathed the full
spirit of the future liberator:
Ne nous fions
qu’à nous; voyons tout par nos yeux:
Ce sont là nos
trépieds, nos oracles, nos dieux.
Such
expressions, however, were no more than the vague and casual word of the esprit
fort, the friend of Chaulieu, and the rhymer of a
dissolute circle, where religion only became tinged with doubt, because conduct
had already become penetrated with licence. More
important than such stray words was the Epistle to Uranie (1722), that truly masculine and terse protest against the popular creed, its
mean and fatuous and contradictory idea of an omnipotent God, who gave us
guilty hearts so as to have the right of punishing us, and planted in us a love
of pleasure so as to torment us the more effectually by appalling ills that an
eternal miracle prevents from ever ending; who drowned the fathers in the
deluge and then died for the children; who exacts an account of their ignorance
from a hundred peoples whom he has himself plunged helplessly into this
ignorance:
Je ne reconnais
point à cette indigne image
Le dieu que je
dois adorer;
Je croirais le
déshonorer
Par une telle
insulte et par un tel hommage.
Though called
The For and Against, the poet hardly tries to maintain any proportion between
the two sides of the argument. The verses were addressed to a lady in a state
of uncertainty as to belief, of whom there were probably more among Voltaire’s
friends of quality than he can have cared to cure or convert. Scepticism was at this time not much more than an
interesting fashion.
The
dilettante believer is indeed not a strong spirit, but the weakest, and the
facts of life were by this time far too serious for Voltaire, for that truth to
have missed his keen-seeing eye. It is not hard to suppose that impatient
weariness of the poor life that was lived around him, had as large a share as
resentment of an injustice, in driving him to a land where men did not merely
mouth idle words of making reason their oracle, their tripod, their god, but
where they had actually systematised the rejection of
Christianity, and had thrown themselves with grave faith on the disciplined
intelligence and its lessons. Voltaire left a country where freedom of thinking
was only an empty watchword, the name for a dissipated fashion. It was
considered free-thinking if a man allowed himself to regard the existence of
the Five Propositions in Jansenius’s book as a thing
indifferent to the happiness of the human race. He found in England that it was
a far-spreading reality, moulding not only the
theological ideas, but the literature, manners, politics, and philosophy, of a
great society. Voltaire left France a poet, he returned to it a sage. Before
his flight, though we do not know to what extent he may have read such history
as was then accessible, he had been actively productive only in the sphere of
the imaginative faculties, and in criticism of the form and regulation proper
to be imposed upon them. When he returned, while his poetic power had ripened,
he had tasted of the fruit of the tree of scientific reason, and, what was not
any less important, he had become alive to the central truth of the social
destination of all art and all knowledge.
In a word, he
was transformed from the penman into the captain and man-at-arms. ‘The example
of England,’ says Condorcet, ‘showed him that truth is not made to remain a
secret in the hands of a few philosophers, and a limited number of men of the
world, instructed, or rather indoctrinated, by the philosophers; smiling with
them at the errors of which the people are the victims, but at the same time
making themselves the champions of these very errors, when their rank or
position gives them a real or chimerical interest in them, and quite ready to
permit the proscription, or even persecution, of their teachers, if they
venture to say what in secret they themselves actually think. From the moment
of his return, Voltaire felt himself called to destroy the prejudices of every
kind, of which his country was the slave.
It is not difficult
to perceive the sorts of fact which would most strike the exile’s attention,
though it would be rash to suppose that things struck him in exact proportion
to their real weight and the depth of their importance, or that he detected the
connection subsisting among them at their roots. Perhaps the first circumstance
to press its unfamiliarity upon him was the social and political consequence of
the men of letters in England, and the recognition given to the power of the
pen. The patronage of men of genius in the reign of Anne and part of the reign
of the first George had been profuse and splendid. The poet who had been thrown
into prison for resenting a whipping from a nobleman’s lackeys, found himself
in a land where Newton and Locke were rewarded with lucrative posts in the
administration of the country, where Prior and Gay acted in important
embassies, and where Addison was a Secretary of State. The author of Œdipe and the Henriade had to hang ignobly about in the crowd at Versailles at the marriage of Lewis
XV. to gain a paltry pittance from the queen’s privy purse, while in England
Hughes and Rowe and Ambrose Philips and Congreve were all enjoying amply
endowed sinecures. The familiar intercourse between the ministers and the
brilliant literary group of that age has been often painted. At the time of
Voltaire’s exile it had just come to an end with the accession to supreme power
of Walpole, who neither knew anything nor cared anything about the literature
of his own time. But the usage was still new, and the men who had profited and
given profit by it were alive, and were the central figures in the circles
among which Voltaire was introduced by Bolingbroke. Newton died in 1727, and
Voltaire saw his death mourned as a public calamity, and surrounded with a pomp
and circumstance in the eye of the country that could not have been surpassed
if he had been, not a geometer, but a king who was the benefactor of his
people. The author of Gulliver’s Travels was still a dignitary in the state
church, and there was still a large association of outward power and dignity
with literary merit.
In so far as
we consider literature to be one of the purely decorative arts, there can be no
harm in this patronage of its most successful, that is its most pleasing,
professors by the political minister; but the more closely literature
approaches to being an organ of serious things, a truly spiritual power, the
more danger there is likely to be in making it a path to temporal station or
emolument. The practical instinct, which on some of its sides seems like a
miraculously implanted substitute for scientific intelligence in English
politics, has led us almost too far in preserving this important separation of
the new church from the functions and rewards of the state. The misfortunes of
France since the Revolution have been due to no one circumstance so markedly as
to the predominance which the man of letters has acquired in that country; and
this fatal predominance was first founded, though assuredly not of set design,
by Voltaire.
Not less
amazing than the high honour paid to intellectual
eminence was the refugee from the city of the Bastille likely to find the
freedom with which public events and public personages were handled by anyone
who could pay a printer. The licence of this time in
press and theatre has only been once or twice equalled since, and it has never been surpassed. From Bolingbroke and Swift down to the
author of The Golden Rump, every writer who chose to consider himself in
opposition treated the minister with a violence and ferocity, which neither
irritated nor daunted that sage head, but which would in France have crowded
the lowest dungeons of the Bastille with victims of Fleury’s anger and fright.
Such license was as natural in a country that had within ninety years gone
through a violent civil war, a revolutionary change of government and line, and
a half-suppressed dispute of succession, as it would have been astonishing in
France, where the continuity of outward order had never been more than
superficially ruffled, even in the most turbulent times of the factious wars of
the League and the Fronde. No new idea of the relations between ruler and
subject had ever penetrated into France, as it had done so deeply in the neighbouring country. No serious popular issues had been so
much as stated. As Voltaire wrote, in the detestable times of Charles IX. and
Henry III. it was only a question whether the people should be the slave of the
Guises, while as for the last war, it deserved only hisses and contempt; for what
was De Retz but a rebel without a purpose and a stirrer of sedition without a
name, and what was the parliament but a body which knew neither what it meant
nor what it did not mean? The apologies of Jesuit writers
for the assassination of tyrants deserve an important place in the history of
the doctrine of divine right; but they were theoretical essays in casuistry for
the initiated few, and certainly conveyed no general principles of popular
right to the many.
Protestantism,
on the other hand, loosened the conception of authority and of the respect
proper for authority, to a degree which has never been realised in the most anarchic movements in France, whose anarchy has ever sprung less
from a disrespect for authority as such, than from a passionate and uncompromising
resolve in this or that group that the authority shall be in one set of hands
and not another. Voltairism has proved itself as
little capable as Catholicism of inspiring any piece that may match with
Milton’s Areopagitica, the noblest defence that was ever made of the noblest of causes. We
know not whether Voltaire ever thought much as to the history and foundation of
that freedom of speech, which even in its abuse struck him as so wonderful a
circumstance in a country that still preserved a stable and orderly society. He
was probably content to admire the phenomenon of a liberty so marvellous, without searching very far for its antecedents.
The mere spectacle of such free, vigorous, many-sided, and truly social and
public activity of intellect as was visible in England at this time, was in
itself enough to fix the gaze of one who was so intensely conscious of his own
energy of intellect, and so bitterly rebellious against the system which
fastened a gag between his lips.
If we would realise the impression of this scene of free speech on
Voltaire’s ardent spirit, we need only remember that, when in time he returned
to his own country, he had to wait long and use many arts and suffer harassing
persecution, before he could publish what he had to say on Newton and Locke,
and in other less important respects had to suppress much of what he had most
at heart to say. ‘One must disguise at Paris,’ he wrote long after his return,
‘what I could not say too strongly at London;’ and he vaunts his hardihood in
upholding Newton against René Descartes, while he confesses that an unfortunate
but necessary circumspection forced him to try to make Locke
obscure. Judge the light which would come into such a mind as his, when he
first saw the discussion and propagation of truth freed from these vile and demoralising affronts. The very conception of truth was a
new one, as a goddess not to be shielded behind the shades of hierophantic
mystery, but rather to be sought in the free tumult and joyous strife of many
voices, there vindicating her own majesty and marking her own children.
Penetrating
deeper, Voltaire found not only a new idea of truth as a something rude,
robust, and self-sufficient, but also what was to him a new order of truths,
the triumphs of slow-footed induction and the positive reason. France was the
hotbed of systems of the physical universe. The provisional and suspensive
attitude was intolerable to her impetuous genius, and the gaps which scientific
investigation was unable to fill, were straightway hidden behind an artificial
screen of metaphysical phantasies. The Aristotelian system died harder in
France than anywhere else, for so late as 1693, while Oxford and Cambridge and
London were actually embracing the Newtonian principles, even the Cartesian
system was forbidden to be taught by decrees of the Sorbonne and of the Council
of the King. When the Cartesian physics once got a foothold, they kept it
as firmly as the system which they had found so much difficulty in displacing.
It is easy to believe that Voltaire’s positive intelligence would hold aloof by
a certain instinct from physical explanations which were unverified and
incapable of being verified, and which were imbrangled with theology and metaphysics.
We can
readily conceive, again, the sensation of freshness and delight with which a
mind so essentially real, and so fundamentally serious, paradoxical as this may
sound in connection with the name of the greatest mocker that has ever lived,
would exchange the poetised astronomy of Fontenelle,
excellently constituted as Fontenelle was in a great many ways, for the sure
and scientific discoveries of a Newton. Voltaire, in whatever subject, never
failed to see through rhetoric, and for rhetoric as the substitute for clear
reasoning he always had an aversion as deep as it was wholesome. Nobody ever
loved grace and form in style more sincerely than Voltaire, but he has shown in
a great many ways that nobody ever valued grace and form more truly at their
worth, compared with correctness of argument and precision and solidity of
conclusion. Descartes, Fontenelle had said, ‘essaying a bold flight, insisted
on placing himself at the source of all, on making himself master of the first
principles of things by a certain number of clear and fundamental ideas, having
thus only to descend to the phenomena of nature as necessary consequences;
Newton, more timid or more modest, began his advance by resting on phenomena in
order to ascend to the unknown principles, resolved to admit them, however the
combination of the results might present them. The one starts from what he
understands clearly to discover the cause of what he sees: the other starts
from what he sees, to discover its cause, whether clear or obscure.’ Caution
and reserve and sound method had achieved a generalisation more vast and amazing than the boldest flight, or most resolute reasoning
downwards from a clearly held conception to phenomena, could possibly have
achieved. This splendid and unrivalled discovery was probably expounded to
Voltaire by Dr. Samuel Clarke, with whom he tells us that he had several
conferences in 1726, and who was one of the ablest of
the Newtonians. He had no doubt learnt the theory of vortices from the Jesuits,
and clear exposition was the only thing needed to convert him to the new
theory, which shines by its own light, and must, in an unbiassed intelligence
with the humblest scientific quality, have extinguished every artificial
explanation. One of the truest signs of the soundness of Voltaire’s
intellectual activity was that his glad reception of the Newtonian doctrine of
attraction did not blind him to the signal service and splendid genius of
Descartes. That loud-shouting yet feeble-footed enthusiasm, which can only make
sure of itself by disparaging the object of a counter-enthusiasm, had no place
in an intellect so emphatically sincere and self-penetrative. He prefaces his
account of the system of attraction by a hearty and loyal appreciation of the propounder of the system of vortices.
The
acquisition of the special theory of attraction was in itself less important
for Voltaire, than the irresistible impulse which it would give to the innate
rationality or positivity of his own mind. It fitted him to encounter with
proper freedom not only vortices, but that tremendous apparatus of monads,
sufficient reason, and pre-established harmony, with which Leibnitz then
overawed European philosophy. ‘O Metaphysics!’ he cried, ‘we have, then, got as
far as they had in the time of the earliest Druids!’
Locke’s essay
impelled him further in the same path of patient and cautious interrogation of
experience; for the same method which established gravitation presided over the
birth of the experiential psychology. Newton instead of elaborating a system of
vortices, or another, out of his own consciousness, industriously and patiently
waited on the phenomena. Locke, too, instead of inventing a romance of the
soul, to use Voltaire’s phrase, sagaciously set himself to watch the phenomena
of thought, and ‘reduced metaphysics to being the experimental physics of the
soul.’ Malebranche, then the reigning philosopher in France, ‘astonished
the reason of those whom he delighted by his style. People trusted him in what
they did not understand, because he began by being right in what they did understand;
he seduced people by being delightful, as Descartes seduced them by being
daring, while Locke was nothing more than sage.’ ‘After all,’ Voltaire
once wrote, ‘we must admit that anybody who has read Locke, or rather who is
his own Locke, must find the Plato’s mere fine talkers, and nothing more. In
point of philosophy, a chapter of Locke or Clarke is, compared with the babble
of antiquity, what Newton’s optics are compared with those of
Descartes.’ It is curious to observe that De Maistre,
who thought more meanly of Plato than Voltaire did, and hardly less meanly than
he thought of Voltaire himself, cried out that in the study of philosophy
contempt for Locke is the beginning of knowledge. Voltaire, on the other
hand, is enchanted to hear that his niece reads the great English philosopher,
like a good father who sheds tears of joy that his children are turning out
well. Augustus published an edict de coercendo intra fines imperio, and like him, Locke has
fixed the empire of knowledge in order to strengthen it. Locke, he says
elsewhere, traced the development of the human reason, as a good anatomist
explains the machinery of the human body: instead of defining all at once what
we do not understand, he examines by degrees what we want to understand: he sometimes
has the courage to speak positively, but sometimes also he has the courage to
doubt. This is a perfectly appreciative account. Locke perceived the
hopelessness of defining things as they are in themselves, and the necessity
before all else of understanding the reach of the human intelligence; the
impossibility of attaining knowledge absolute and transcendent; and the
limitations of our thinking and knowing faculties within the bounds of an
experience that must always be relative. The doubt which Voltaire praised in
Locke had nothing to do with that shivering mood which receives overmuch poetic
praise in our day, as the honest doubt that has more faith than half your
creeds. There was no question of the sentimental juvenilities of children
crying for light. It was by no means religious doubt, but philosophic; and it
affected only the possibilities1139 of ontological knowledge, leaving the
grounds of faith on the one hand, and practical conduct on the other, exactly
where they were. His intense feeling for actualities would draw Voltaire
irresistibly to the writer who, in his judgment, closed the gates of the
dreamland of metaphysics, and banished the vaulting ambition of a priori
certainties, which led nowhere and assured nothing. Voltaire’s keen practical instinct
may well have revealed to him that men were most likely to attribute to the
great social problem of the improvement of mankind its right supremacy, when
they had ceased to concentrate intellectual effort on the insoluble; and Locke
went a long way towards showing how insoluble those questions were, on which,
as it chanced, the most strenuous efforts of the intellect of Europe since the
decline of theology had been concentrated.
That he
should have acquired more scientific views either upon the origin of ideas, or
the question whether the soul always thinks, or upon the reason why an apple
falls to the ground, or why the planets remain in their orbits, was on the
whole very much less important for Voltaire, than a profound and very vital
sentiment which was raised to supreme prominence in his mind, by the spectacle
of these vast continents of knowledge newly discovered by the adventurous yet
sure explorers of English thought. This sentiment was a noble faith, none the
less firm because it was so passionate, in the ability of the relative and
practical understanding to reach truth; a deep-rooted reverence for it, as a
majestic power bearing munificent and unnumbered gifts to mankind. Hence the
vivacity of the annotations which about this time (1728) Voltaire affixed to
Pascal’s famous Thoughts, and which were regarded at that time as the audacious carpings of a shallow poet against a profound
philosopher. They were in truth the protest of a lively common sense against a
strained, morbid, and often sophistical, misrepresentation of human nature and
human circumstance. Voltaire shot a penetrative ray through the clouds of
doubt, out of which Pascal had made an apology for mysticism. Even if there
were no direct allusions to Locke, as there are, we should know from whom the
writer had learnt the art of insisting on the relativity of propositions,
reducing them to definable terms, and being very careful against
those slippery unobserved transitions from metaphor to reality, and from a term
used in its common sense to the same term in a transcendental sense, by which
Pascal brought the seeming contradictions of life, and its supposed pettiness, into a light as oppressively glaring as it was artificial.
‘These pretended oppositions that you call contradictions are necessary
ingredients in the composition of man, who is, like the rest of nature, what he
is bound to be.’ And where is the wise man who would be full of despair
because he cannot find out the exact constitution of his thought, because he
only knows a few attributes of matter, because God has not disclosed to him all
his secrets? He might as well despair because he has not got four feet and two
wings. This sage strain was the restoration to men of their self-respect,
the revival of that intelligence which Pascal had so humiliated and thrust
under foot. It was what he had seen in England of the positive feats which
reason had achieved, that filled Voltaire with exultation in its power, and
confidence in the prospects of the race which possessed such an instrument.
‘What strange rage possesses some people, to insist on our all being miserable!
They are like a quack, who would fain have us believe we are ill, in order to
sell us his pills. Keep thy drugs, my friend, and leave me my health.’
From this
there flowed that other vehement current in his soul, of energetic hatred
toward the black clouds of prejudice, of mean self-love, of sinister preference
of class or order, of indolence, obstinacy, wanton fancy, and all the other
unhappy leanings of human nature, and vexed and fatal conjunctures of
circumstance, which interpose between humanity and the beneficent sunbeams of
its own intelligence, that central light of the universe. Hence, again, by a
sufficiently visible chain of thought, his marked disesteem for far-sounding
names of brutal conquerors, and his cold regard for those outward and material
circumstances in the state of nations, which strike the sense, but do not touch
the inward reason. ‘Not long ago,’ he writes once, ‘a distinguished company
were discussing the trite and frivolous question, who was the greatest man,
Caesar, Alexander, Tamerlane, or Cromwell. Somebody answered that it was
undoubtedly Isaac Newton. This person was right; for if true greatness consists
in having received from heaven a powerful understanding and in using it to
enlighten oneself and all others, then such an one as Newton, who is hardly to
be met with once in ten centuries, is in truth the great man.... It is to him
who masters our minds by the force of truth, not to those who enslave men by
violence; it is to him who understands the universe, not to those who disfigure
it, that we owe our reverence.’ This may seem trite to us, as the question
which suggested it seemed to Voltaire, but we need only reflect, first, how new
this was, even as an idea, in the France which Voltaire had quitted, and,
second, how in spite of the nominal acceptance of the idea, in the England of
our own time there is, with an immense majority not only of the general vulgar
but of the special vulgar who presume to teach in press and pulpit, no name of
slight at once so disdainful and so sure of transfixing as the name of thinker.
The discovery
of the New World did not fire the imagination and stir the thought of Europe
more intensely, than the vision of these new worlds of knowledge kindled the ardour of the receptive spirit which had just come into
contact with them. But besides the speculative aspects of what he saw in
England, Voltaire was deeply penetrated by the social differences between a
country that had been effectively, if only partially, transformed from
feudalism, and his own, where feudalism had only been transformed into a system
more repressive than itself, and more unfit to conduct a nation to the free and
industrious developments of new civilisation. It is a
remarkable thing that though Voltaire’s habitual companions or patrons had
belonged to the privileged class, he had been sufficiently struck by the evils
incident to the privileged system to notice the absence of such evils in
England, and to make a clear attempt, though an insufficient one, to understand
the secret of the English immunity from them. One of the worst curses of France
was the taille or capitation-tax, and the way in which it was levied and
assessed. In England, Voltaire noticed, the peasant has not his feet bruised in
wooden shoes, he eats white bread, is decently clad, is not terrified to
increase the number of his stock, or to roof his dwelling with tiles, lest his
tax should be raised next year. Again, he placed his finger on one of the
circumstances that did most to spoil the growth of a compact and well-knit
society in France, when he pointed to the large number of farmers in England
with five or six hundred pounds sterling a year, who do not think it beneath
them to cultivate the earth which has made them rich, and on which they live in
active freedom. The profoundest modern investigator of the conditions of
French society in the eighteenth century has indicated the eagerness of every
man who got a little capital to quit the country and buy a place in a town, as
doing more harm to the progress of the agriculture and commerce of France than
even the taille itself and the trade corporations.
Voltaire
perceived the astonishing fact that in this country a man because he is a noble
or a priest was not exempt from paying certain taxes, and that the Commons who
regulated the taxes, though second to the Lords in rank, were above them in
legislative influence. His acute sight also revealed to him the importance
of the mixture of ranks and classes in common pursuits, and he records with
admiration instances of the younger sons of peers of the realm following trade.
‘Whoever arrives in Paris from the depths of a remote province with money to
spend and a name in ac or ille,
can talk about a man like me, a man of my quality,’ and hold a merchant in
sovereign contempt. The merchant again so constantly hears his business spoken
of with disdain that he is fool enough to blush for it; yet I am not sure which
is the more useful to a state, a thickly-bepowdered lord who knows exactly what
time the king rises and what time he goes to bed, and gives himself mighty airs
of greatness while he plays the part of a slave in a minister’s ante-room; or
the merchant who enriches his country, gives orders from his counting-house at
Surat or Cairo, and contributes to the happiness of the globe. It is easy
to conceive the fury which these contrasts drawn from English observation would
excite among the personages in France who happened to get the worst side in
them, and there was assuredly nothing surprising in the decree of the
Parliament of Paris (1734), which condemned the Letters on the English to be
publicly burnt, as scandalous and contrary alike to good manners and the
respect due to principalities and powers.
The English
reader of the Letters is naturally struck by the absence of any adequate
account of our political liberties and free constitutional forms. There is a
good chapter on Bacon, one on inoculation, and several on the Quakers, but on
the civil constitution hardly a word of large appreciativeness. Not only this,
but there is no sign that Voltaire either set any due or special value on the
popular forms of the Hanoverian time, or clearly understood that the liberty,
which was so amazing and so precious to him in the region of speculative and
literary activity, was the direct fruit of that general spirit of freedom,
which is naturally engendered in a people accustomed to take an active part in
the conduct of its own affairs. Liberty in spirituals was adorable to him, but
for liberty in temporals he never seems to have had more than a very distant
and verbal kind of respect; just because, with all his unmatched keenness of
sight, he failed to discover that the English sturdiness in the matter of civil
rights was the very root and cause, not only of that material prosperity which
struck him so much, and of the slightness and movableness of the line which
divided the aristocracy from the commercial classes, but also of the fact that
a Newton and a Locke were inwardly emboldened to give free play to their
intelligence without fear of being punished for their conclusions, and of the
only less important fact that whatever conclusions speculative genius might
establish would be given to the world without interposition from any court or
university or official tribunal. Voltaire undoubtedly admired the English for
their parliament, because the material and superficial advantages that
delighted him were evidently due to the system, which happened to be
parliamentary. What we miss is any consciousness that these advantages would
not have been what they were, if they had been conferred by an absolute
sovereign; any recognition that political activity throughout a nation works in
a thousand indirect but most potent ways, and is not more to be prized for
this, than for its direct and most palpable consequences. In one place, indeed,
he mentions that the honour paid to men of letters is
due to the form of government, but his language betrays a wholly inadequate and
incorrect notion of the true operation of the form of government. ‘There are in
London,’ he says, ‘about eight hundred people with the right of speaking in
public, and maintaining the interests of the nation. Some five or six thousand
pretend to the same honour in their turn. All the
rest set themselves up to judge these, and everybody can print what he thinks.
So all the nation is bound to instruct itself. All talk is about the
governments of Athens and Rome, and it becomes necessary to read the authors
who have discussed them. That naturally leads to love of polite learning.’ This
is to confound a very trivial accident of popular governments with their
essence. If culture thrives under them—a very doubtful position—it is not
because voters wish to understand the historical allusions of candidates, but
because the general stir and life of public activity tends to commove the whole
system. Political freedom does not produce men of genius, but its atmosphere is
more favourable than any other to their making the
best of their genius in the service of mankind.
Voltaire, in
this as in too much besides, was content with a keen and rapid glance at the
surface. The reader may remember his story of meeting a boatman one day on the
Thames, who seeing that he was a Frenchman, with a too characteristic kind of
courtesy, took the opportunity of bawling out, with the added emphasis of a
round oath, that he would rather be a boatman on the Thames than an archbishop
in France. The next day Voltaire saw his man in prison with irons on and
praying an alms from the passers-by, and so asked him whether he still thought
as scurvily of an archbishop in France. ‘Ah, sir,’ cried the man, ‘what an
abominable government! I have been carried off by force to go and serve in one
of the king’s ships in Norway. They take me from my wife and my children, and
lay me up in prison with irons on my legs until the time for going on board,
for fear I should run away.’ A countryman of Voltaire’s confessed that he felt
a splenetic joy that a people who were constantly taunting the French with
their servitude, were in sooth just as much slaves themselves; but for my own
part, says Voltaire, I felt a humaner sentiment, I
was afflicted at there being no liberty on the earth.
This is well
enough as a comment on the abomination of impressment; yet we feel that there
is behind it, and not here only but generally in Voltaire, a sort of confusion
between two very distinct conceptions, that both in his day and ever since have
been equally designated by the common name of civil liberty. The first of these
ideas is a mere privative, undoubtedly of sovereign importance, but still a
privative, and implies absence, more or less complete, of arbitrary control
from without, of interference with individual action by authority, of any
pretension on the part of any organised body to
hinder any member of the society from doing or abstaining from doing what may
seem right in his own eyes, provided he pays a corresponding respect to the
freedom of his fellows. Freedom in this sense Voltaire fully understood, and
valued as profoundly as it deserves to be valued. Political liberty, however,
has not only a meaning of abstention, but a meaning of participation. If in one
sense it is a sheer negative, and a doctrine of rights, in another sense it is
thoroughly positive, and a gospel of duties. The liberty which has really made
England what it so delighted and stimulated and inflamed Voltaire to find her,
has been quite as much of the second kind as of the first; that liberty which
consists in a national habit of independent and watchful interest in the
transaction of the national affairs by the persons most concerned in them; in a
general consciousness of the duty of having some opinion on the business of the
state; in a recognition on the part of the government that the balance of this
opinion is necessary as a sanction to any policy, to which the effective force
of the state is applied. It is true that this public participation in public
concerns has sometimes been very dark and blind, as it has often been in the
highest degree enlightened, but for good or for evil it has been the root of
the matter.
The great
Frenchmen, who have been most characteristically French, while valuing all and
envying many of the best products of our liberty, may be said generally to have
failed entirely to detect that the salt of English character, in days when it
had more robustness than we can see just now, sprung from the double
circumstance of every man being at liberty to have, and being inclined to take
the trouble to have, an opinion about the method and doings of his government;
and of so many men being called upon in high capacity or low, in an important
function or an obscure one, to take an independent and free share in controlling
or initiating the doings of their government. Take Montesquieu, for example. He
came to England just when Voltaire quitted it, and studied carefully those
political facts which his countryman had so neglected. Yet he saw no deeper
into the spirit of our institutions than to fix on the constitutional balance
of powers as the great secret of our freedom and order. And Montesquieu, in
spite of this, was wiser than most of his contemporaries, for he at least saw
the worth of constitutional freedom, if he failed to see other ingredients of
still more importance. French statesmen and publicists have been systematically
blind to the great truth that there is no royal road to national well-being,
and that nations will deliberately put away happiness from themselves, unless
such happiness comes to them in a given way. The Physiocrats, who were with all
their shortcomings the most nearly scientific social thinkers France possessed,
could rise to no higher conception of a national life than the supreme
authority of a wise and benevolent monarch, giving good gifts to his subjects.
Turgot, with all the breadth and sagacity of his genius, when five-and-forty
years after our present date he came into power, austerely clung to the same
disastrous idea of passing reasoned laws, in the shape of the beneficial edicts
of an absolute power. Voltaire, in the same way, never rose above the simple
political conception of an eastern tale, a good-tempered despot with a sage
vizier. In politics, then, he failed to carry away from England the very
essence and principle of our institutions, with which it was so much more
important that his countrymen should be familiarised than that they should follow inoculation.
It may at
first sight be astonishing to find that, while Voltaire was impressed only in a
vague and general way with the free variety of theological opinion which
Protestantism had secured for England, the sect which made a sort of mark on
his mind was that which conceived the idea that Christianity has after all
something to do with the type and example of Christ. We know how laughable and
monstrous the Quaker scheme has appeared to people who have been steeped from
their youth upwards in elaborate systems of abstruse metaphysical dogma, mystic
ceremonies, hierarchic ordering, and profuse condemnation of rival creeds.
Voltaire’s imagination was struck by a sect who professed to regard the
religion of Christ as a simple and austere discipline of life, who repudiated
ritual, and held war for the worst of anti-christian practices. The forms and doctrines of the established church of the country he
would be likely to take merely for so much of the common form of the national
institutions. He would simply regard it as the English way of narrowing the
mind and consolidating the social order. Gibbon’s famous sentence was not yet
written, which described all religions as equally true in the eyes of the
people, equally false in the eyes of the philosopher, and equally useful in the
eyes of the magistrate. But the idea was the idea of the century, and Voltaire
would justly look upon the Anglican profession as a temporarily useful and
statesmanlike settlement. He praised its clergy for the superior regularity of
their manners. ‘That indefinable being, who is neither ecclesiastic nor
secular, in a word, who is called abbé,
is an unknown species in England; the clergy here are all prigs, and nearly all
pedants. When they learn that in France young men notorious for their
debauchery, and raised to preferment by the intrigues of women, pursue their
amours publicly, amuse themselves by the composition of gallant verses, give every
day prolonged and luxurious suppers, and rise from them to implore the
enlightenment of the holy spirit, boldly calling themselves the successors of
the apostles—why, then our English thank God that they are Protestants.’
If, however,
in face of a young and lively French graduate, bawling theology in the schools
in the morning and in the evening singing tender songs with the ladies, an
Anglican divine is a very Cato, this Cato is a downright gallant before a
Scotch presbyterian, who assumes a grave step and a sour mien, preaches from
the nose, and gives the name of harlot of Babylon to all churches in which some
of the ecclesiastics are so fortunate as to receive an income of fifty thousand
livres a year. However, each man takes whatever road to heaven he pleases. If
there were one religion in England, they would have to fear its despotism; if
there were only two, they would cut one another’s throats; but there are
thirty; so they live peaceably and happily together.
In the
Quakers Voltaire saw something quite different from the purely political
pretensions and internecine quarrels of doctrine of the ordinary worldly sects.
It is impossible to say how much of the kindliness with which he speaks of them
is due to real admiration of their simple, dignified, and pacific life, and how
much to a mischievous desire to make their praise a handle for the dispraise of
overweening competitors. On the whole there is a sincerity and heartiness of
interest in his long account of this sect, which persuades one that he was
moved by a genuine sympathy with a religion that could enjoin the humane and
peaceful and spiritual precepts of Christ, while putting away baptism,
ceremonial communion, and hierophantic orders. The nobility of the social
theories of the Society of Friends would naturally stir Voltaire even more
deeply than their abstention from practices that were in his eyes degrading
superstitions. He felt that the repugnance to lower the majesty of their deity,
by taking his name upon their lips as solemn ratification of their words, had
the effect of elevating the dignity of man, by making his bare word fully
credible without this solemn ratification. Their refusal to comply with the
deferential usages of social intercourse, though nominally based on the
sinfulness of signs of homage to any mere mortal, insinuated a consciousness of
equality and self-respect in that mere mortal who was careful to make no bows
and to keep his hat on in every presence. Above all, Voltaire, who was nowhere
more veritably modern or better entitled to our veneration than by reason of
his steadfast hatred of war, revered a sect so far removed from the brutality
of the military régime as to hold peace for a first principle of the Christian
faith and religious practice. The reason why we do not go to war, his Quaker
says, is not that we are afraid of death, but because we are not wolves, nor
tigers, nor dogs, but Christian men. ‘Our God, who has bidden us love our enemies
and suffer evil without complaint, assuredly has no mind that we should cross
the sea to go and cut the throats of our brothers, because murderers in red
clothes and hats two feet high enlist citizens, making a noise with two little
sticks on an ass’s skin tightly stretched. And when, after victories won, all
London blazes with illuminations, the sky is aflame with rockets, and the air
resounds with the din of bells, organs, cannon, we mourn in silence over the
slaughter that causes all the public joy.’
Voltaire, let
us add, was no dilettante traveller constructing
views and deducing theories of national life out of his own uninstructed
consciousness. No German could have worked more diligently at the facts, and we
may say here, once for all, that if it is often necessary to condemn him for
superficiality, this lack of depth seldom at any time proceeds from want of
painstaking. His unrivalled brilliance of expression blinds us to the extreme
and conscientious industry that provided matter. The most illustrious exile
that our free land has received from France in our own times, and assuredly far
more of a giant in the order of imagination than Voltaire, never had
intellectual curiosity enough to learn the language of the country that had
given him twenty years of shelter. Voltaire, in the few months of his exile
here acquired such an astonishing mastery over English as to be able to read
and relish an esoteric book like Hudibras, and to compass the enormously
difficult feat of rendering portions of it into good French verse. He
composed an essay on epic poetry in the English tongue, and he wrote one act of
Brutus in English.
He read
Shakespeare, and made an elaborate study of his method. He declares that Milton
does as much honour to England as the great Newton,
and he took especial pains not only to master and appreciate the secret of
Milton’s poetic power, but even to ascertain the minutest circumstances of his
life. He studied Dryden, ‘an author who would have a glory without blemish, if
he had only written the tenth part of his works.’ He found Addison the first
Englishman who had written a reasonable tragedy, and Addison’s character of
Cato one of the finest creations of any stage. Wycherley, Vanbrugh, and
Congreve he esteemed more highly than most of their countrymen do now. An act
of a play of Lillo’s was the base of the fourth act of Mahomet. Rochester,
Waller, Prior, and Pope, he read carefully and admired as heartily as they
deserved. Long after he had left England behind, he places Pope and Addison on
a level for variety of genius with Machiavel and Leibnitz and Fontenelle; and
Pope he evidently for a long while kept habitually by his elbow. Swift he
placed before Rabelais, calling him Rabelais in his senses, and, as usual,
giving good reasons for his preference; for Swift, he says justly, has not the
gaiety of Rabelais, but he has all the finesse, the sense, the variety, the
fine taste, in which the priest of Meudon was
wanting. In philosophy, besides Locke, there is evidence that
he read something of Hobbes, and something of Berkeley, and something of
Cudworth. Always, however, ‘harassed, wearied, ashamed of having sought so many
truths and found so many chimeras, I returned to Locke; like a prodigal son
returning to his father, I threw myself into the arms of that modest man, who
never pretends to know what he does not know, who in truth has no enormous
possessions, but whose substance is well assured.’
Nor did
Voltaire limit himself to the study of science, philosophy, and poetry. He
plunged into the field of theology, and mastered that famous deistical
controversy, of which the seed had been sown in the first half of the
seventeenth century by Lord Herbert of Cherbury, the
correspondent of Descartes and the earliest of the English metaphysical thinkers. Lord
Herbert’s object was to disengage from revelation both our conceptions of the
one supreme power, and the sanctions of good and bad conduct. Toland, whom we
know also that Voltaire read, aimed at disengaging Christianity from mystery,
and discrediting the canon of the New Testament. In 1724 Collins published his
Discourse on the Grounds and Reasons of the Christian Religion, of which we are
told that few books ever made a greater noise than this did at its first
publication. The press teemed with vindications, replies, and rejoinders to
Collins’s arguments during the whole of Voltaire’s residence in
England. His position was one which no modern freethinker would dream of
making a central point of attack, and which hardly any modern apologist would
take the pains to reply to. He maintained that Jesus Christ and the apostles
trusted to the prophecies of the Old Testament for their credentials, and then
he showed, or tried to show, in various ways, that these prophecies would not
bear the weight which was thus laid upon them. We may be sure that Voltaire’s
alert curiosity would interest him profoundly in the lively polemical ferment
which this notable contention of Collins’s stirred up.
Woolston’s
discourses, written to prove that the miracles of the New Testament are as
mythical and allegorical as the prophecies of the old, appeared at the same
time, and had an enormous sale. Voltaire was much struck by this writer’s
coarse and hardy way of dealing with the miraculous legends, and the article on
Miracles in the Philosophical Dictionary shows how carefully he had read
Woolston’s book. We find references to Shaftesbury and Chubb in Voltaire’s
letters and elsewhere, though they are not the references of an admirer, and
Bolingbroke was one of the most influential and intimate of his friends. It is
not too much to say that Bolingbroke was the direct progenitor of Voltaire’s
opinions in religion, and that nearly every one of the positive articles in
Voltaire’s rather moderately sized creed was held and inculcated by that
brilliant and disordered genius. He did not always accept Bolingbroke’s
optimism, but even as late in the century as 1767 Voltaire thought it worthwhile
to borrow his name for a volume of compendious attack on the popular religion. Bolingbroke’s tone was peculiarly light and peculiarly
well-bred. His infidelity was strictly infidelity for the upper classes; ingenious, full of literature, and
elegantly supercilious. He made no pretence to
theological criticism in any sense that can be gravely admitted, but looked at
the claims of revelation with the eye of a polished man of the world, and met
its arguments with those general considerations of airy probability which go so
far with men who insist on having plausible opinions on all subjects, while they
will not take pains to work to the bottom of any.
Villemain’s observation that there is not one of Voltaire’s
writings that does not bear the mark of his sojourn in England, is specially true of what he wrote against theology. It was
the English onslaught which sowed in him the seed of the idea, and eventually
supplied him with the argumentative instruments, of a systematic and reasoned
attack upon that mass of doctrinal superstition and social abuse, which it had
hitherto been the fashion for even the strongest spirits in his own country to
do no more than touch with a cool sneer or a flippant insinuation, directed to
the private ear of a sympathiser. Who, born within
the last forty years, cried Burke, has read one word of Collins, and Toland,
and Chubb, and Morgan, and that whole race who called themselves Freethinkers?
Who now reads Bolingbroke? Who ever read him through? This was very well,
but hundreds of thousands of persons born within those last forty years had
read Voltaire, and Voltaire had drawn from the armoury of these dead and unread Freethinkers the weapons which he made sharp with the
mockery of his own spirit. He stood on the platform which they had constructed,
to stretch forth his hand against the shrine and the image before which so many
credulous generations had bowed down. It was in this most transformed shape
among others that at length, late and changed, but directly of descent, the
free and protesting genius of the Reformation made its decisive entry into
France.
It is easy to
cite proofs of the repudiation by Protestant bodies of the Protestant
principle, to multiply instances of the narrow rigidity of their dogma, and the
intolerance of their discipline. This method supplies an excellent answer as
against Protestants who tax Catholics with the crime of persecution, or the
crime of opposing intellectual independence. It cannot, however, touch the fact
that Protestantism was indirectly the means of creating and dispersing an
atmosphere of rationalism, in which there speedily sprang up philosophical,
theological, and political influences, all of them entirely antagonistic to the
old order of thought and institution. The whole intellectual temperature
underwent a permanent change, that was silently mortal to the most flourishing
tenets of all sorts. It is futile to ask for a precise logical chain of
relations between the beginning of a movement and its end; and there is no more
direct and logical connection between the right of private judgment and an
experiential doctrine of psychology, than there is between experiential
psychology and deism. Nobody now thinks that the effect is homogeneous with its
cause, or that there is any objective resemblance between a blade of wheat and
the moisture and warmth which fill and expand it. All we can see is that the
proclamation of the rights of free judgment would tend to substitute reason for
authority, and evidence for tradition, as the arbiters of opinion; and that the
political expression of this change in the civil wars of the middle of the
seventeenth century would naturally deepen the influence of the new principle,
and produce the Lockian rationalism of the end of that century, which almost
instantaneously extended from the region of metaphysics into the region of
theology.
The historian
of every kind of opinion, and the student of the great chiefs of intellectual
movements, habitually do violence to actual circumstances, by imparting too
systematic a connection to the various parts of belief, and by assuming an
unreal degree of conscious logical continuity among the notions of individual
thinkers. Critics fill in the frame with a completeness and exactitude that had
no counterpart in the man’s own judgments, and they identify him with a
multitude of deductions from his premisses, which may
be fairly drawn, but which never at all entered into his mind, and formed no
part of his character. The philosophy of the majority of men is nothing more
shaped and incorporate than a little group of potential and partially
incoherent tendencies. To stiffen these into a system of definite formulas is
the most deceptive, as it is the most common, of critical processes. A few
persons, with an exceptional turn for philosophy, consciously embody their
metaphysical principles with a certain detail in all the rest of their
thinking. With most people, however, even people of superior capacity, the
relation between their ground-system, such as a critic might supply them with,
and their manifestations of intellectual activity, is of an extremely indirect
and general kind.
Hence the
untrustworthiness of those critical schemata, so attractive for their compact
order, which first make Voltaire a Lockian sensationalist, and then trace his
deism to his sensationalism. We have already seen that he was a deist before he
came to England, just as Lord Herbert of Cherbury was
a deist, who wrote before Locke was born. It was not the metaphysical
revolution of Locke which led to deism, but the sort of way in which he thought
about metaphysics, a way which was immediately applied to theology by other
people, whether assailants or defenders of the current opinions. Locke’s was
‘common-sense thinking,’and the fashion spread. The
air was thick with common-sense objections to Christianity, as it was with
common-sense ideas as to the way in which we come to have ideas. There was no
temperament to which such an atmosphere could be so congenial as Voltaire’s, of
whom we cannot toooften repeat, considering the
vulgar reputation he has for violence and excess, that he was in thought the
very genius of good sense, whether or not we fully admit M. Cousin’s
qualification of it as superficial good sense. It has been said that he always
speaks of Descartes, Leibnitz, and Spinoza, like a man to whom nature has
refused the metaphysical sense. At any rate he could never agree with
them, and he never tried to find truth by the roads which they had made. It is
true, however, that he shows no sign of special fitness for metaphysics, any
more than he did for physical science. The metaphysics of Locke lay undeveloped
in his mind, just as the theory of evolution lies in so many minds at the
present time. There is a faint informal reference of other theories to this
central and half-seen standard. When metaphysical subjects came before him, he
felt that he had this for a sheet-anchor, and he did not greatly care to keep
proving it again and again by continued criticism or examination. The upshot of
his acquaintance with Locke was a systematic adherence to common-sense modes of
thinking; and he always betrayed the faults and shortcomings to which such
modes inevitably lead, when they are brought, to the exclusion of complementary
ideas, to the practical subjects that comprehend more than prudence,
self-interest, and sobriety. The subject that does beyond any other comprehend
more than these elements is religion, and the substantial vices of Voltaire’s
objections to religion first arose from his familiarity with the English form
of deism, and his instinctive feeling for its method.
The deism of
Leibnitz was a positive belief, and made the existence of a supreme power an
actual and living object of conviction. The mark of this belief has remained on
German speculation throughout its course, down to our own day. English deism,
on the contrary, was only a particular way of repudiating Christianity. There
was as little of God in it as could well be. Its theory was that God had given
each man the light of reason in his own breast; that by this reason every
scheme of belief must be tried, and accepted or rejected; and that the Christian
scheme being so tried was in various ways found wanting. The formula of some
book of the eighteenth century, that God created nature and nature created the
world, must be allowed to have reduced theistic conception to something like
the shadow of smoke. The English eighteenth-century formula was, theistically,
nearly as void. The Being who set the reason of each individual on a kind of
judicial bench within the forum of his own conscience, and left him and it
together to settle belief and conduct between them, was a tolerably remote and
unreal sort of personage. His spiritual force, according to such a doctrine,
became very much as if it had no existence.
It was not to
be expected that a sovereign dwelling in such amazingly remote lands as this
would continue long with undisputed authority, when all the negative forces of
the time had reached their full momentum. In England the reaction against this
strange absentee government of the universe took the form which might have been
anticipated from the deep hold that Protestantism had won, and the spirituality
which had been engendered by Protestant reference to the relations between the
individual conscience and the mystic operations of faith. Deism became a
reality with a God in it in the great Evangelical revival, terrible and
inevitable, which has so deeply coloured religious
feeling and warped intellectual growth in England ever since. In France,
thought took a very different and much simpler turn. Or perhaps it would be
more correct to say that it took no turn at all, but carried the godless deism
of the English school to its fair conclusion, and dismissed a deity who only
reigned and did not govern. The whole movement had a single origin. There is
not one of the arguments of the French philosophers in the eighteenth century,
says a very competent authority, which cannot be found in the English school of
the beginning of the century. Voltaire, who carried the English way of
thinking about the supernatural power into
France, lived
to see a band of trenchant and energetic disciples develop principles which he
had planted, into a system of dogmatic atheism. The time came when he was
spoken of contemptuously as retrograde and superstitious: ‘Voltaire est bigot, il est déiste.
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