The Ruins, or, Meditation on the Revolutions of Empires and the Law of Nature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 331 pages of information about The Ruins, or, Meditation on the Revolutions of Empires and the Law of Nature.

The Ruins, or, Meditation on the Revolutions of Empires and the Law of Nature eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 331 pages of information about The Ruins, or, Meditation on the Revolutions of Empires and the Law of Nature.

Hail solitary ruins, holy sepulchres and silent walls! you I invoke; to you I address my prayer.  While your aspect averts, with secret terror, the vulgar regard, it excites in my heart the charm of delicious sentiments—­sublime contemplations.  What useful lessons, what affecting and profound reflections you suggest to him who knows how to consult you!  When the whole earth, in chains and silence bowed the neck before its tyrants, you had already proclaimed the truths which they abhor; and confounding the dust of the king with that of the meanest slave, had announced to man the sacred dogma of Equality.  Within your pale, in solitary adoration of Liberty, I saw her Genius arise from the mansions of the dead; not such as she is painted by the impassioned multitude, armed with fire and sword, but under the august aspect of Justice, poising in her hand the sacred balance wherein are weighed the actions of men at the gates of eternity!

O Tombs! what virtues are yours!  You appal the tyrant’s heart, and poison with secret alarm his impious joys.  He flies, with coward step, your incorruptible aspect, and erects afar his throne of insolence.* You punish the powerful oppressor; you wrest from avarice and extortion their ill-gotten gold, and you avenge the feeble whom they have despoiled; you compensate the miseries of the poor by the anxieties of the rich; you console the wretched, by opening to him a last asylum from distress; and you give to the soul that just equipoise of strength and sensibility which constitutes wisdom—­the true science of life.  Aware that all must return to you, the wise man loadeth not himself with the burdens of grandeur and of useless wealth:  he restrains his desires within the limits of justice; yet, knowing that he must run his destined course of life, he fills with employment all its hours, and enjoys the comforts that fortune has allotted him.  You thus impose on the impetuous sallies of cupidity a salutary rein! you calm the feverish ardor of enjoyments which disturb the senses; you free the soul from the fatiguing conflict of the passions; elevate it above the paltry interests which torment the crowd; and surveying, from your commanding position, the expanse of ages and nations, the mind is only accessible to the great affections—­to the solid ideas of virtue and of glory.

* The cathedral of St. Denis is the tomb of the kings of France; and it was because the towers of that edifice are seen from the Castle of St. Germain, that Louis xiv. quitted that admirable residence, and established a new one in the savage forests of Versailles.

     (This note, like many others, has been omitted from the
     American editions.  It seems pertinent to the subject, and
     is explanatory of the text.—­Pub.)

Ah! when the dream of life is over, what will then avail all its agitations, if not one trace of utility remains behind?

O Ruins! to your school I will return!  I will seek again the calm of your solitudes; and there, far from the afflicting spectacle of the passions, I will cherish in remembrance the love of man, I will employ myself on the means of effecting good for him, and build my own happiness on the promotion of his.

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The Ruins, or, Meditation on the Revolutions of Empires and the Law of Nature from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.