"Pope, Alexander - Essay on Man" - читать интересную книгу автора (Pope Alexander)

An Essay on Man.

Moral essays and satires

by Alexander Pope.


INTRODUCTION.

Pope's life as a writer falls into three periods, answering fairly enough
to the three reigns in which he worked. Under Queen Anne he was an
original poet, but made little money by his verses; under George I. he was
chiefly a translator, and made much money by satisfying the
French-classical taste with versions of the "Iliad" and "Odyssey." Under
George I. he also edited Shakespeare, but with little profit to himself;
for Shakespeare was but a Philistine in the eyes of the French-classical
critics. But as the eighteenth century grew slowly to its work, signs of a
deepening interest in the real issues of life distracted men's attention
from the culture of the snuff-box and the fan. As Pope's genius ripened,
the best part of the world in which he worked was pressing forward, as a
mariner who will no longer hug the coast but crowds all sail to cross the
storms of a wide unknown sea. Pope's poetry thus deepened with the course
of time, and the third period of his life, which fell within the reign of
George II., was that in which he produced the "Essay on Man," the "Moral
Essays," and the "Satires." These deal wholly with aspects of human life
and the great questions they raise, according throughout with the doctrine
of the poet, and of the reasoning world about him in his latter day, that
"the proper study of mankind is Man."

Wrongs in high places, and the private infamy of many who enforced the
doctrines of the Church, had produced in earnest men a vigorous antagonism.
Tyranny and unreason of low-minded advocates had brought religion itself
into question; and profligacy of courtiers, each worshipping the golden
calf seen in his mirror, had spread another form of scepticism. The
intellectual scepticism, based upon an honest search for truth, could end
only in making truth the surer by its questionings. The other form of
scepticism, which might be traced in England from the low-minded
frivolities of the court of Charles the Second, was widely spread among the
weak, whose minds flinched from all earnest thought. They swelled the
number of the army of bold questioners upon the ways of God to Man, but
they were an idle rout of camp-followers, not combatants; they simply ate,
and drank, and died.

In 1697, Pierre Bayle published at Rotterdam, his "Historical and Critical
Dictionary," in which the lives of men were associated with a comment that
suggested, from the ills of life, the absence of divine care in the shaping
of the world. Doubt was born of the corruption of society; Nature and Man
were said to be against faith in the rule of a God, wise, just, and
merciful. In 1710, after Bayle's death, Leibnitz, a German philosopher
then resident in Paris, wrote in French a book, with a title formed from