Table Talk英语美文
John Selden (1584—1654)
John Selden was born in Sussex, England; became a lawyer and jurist of wide reputation; published a number of works in 1618 which were suppressed; was imprisoned in the Tower in 1621 for sedition and in 1628 assisted in drawing up the Petition of Right against the encroachments of royalty; was elected in 1640 to the Long Parliament and was a member of the committee that impeached Archbishop Laud. The extracts here printed from Selden’s Table-Talk, a missellany of learned epigrammatic comments on all types of subject, illustrate the basic “observations” upon which essays are built. Selden did not intend them for publication. In fact the book, which saw the light first in1689, is the joint work of Selden and the compiler, Richar Milward. It was not published till long after his death. There are 154 comments, of which those given are Nos.13, 38, 86, 151,and 152 (in S. H. Reynold’s ed/ Oxford, 1892).
Changing Sides
‘Tis the trial of a man to see if he will change his side; and if he be so weak as to change once, he will change again. Your country fellows have a way to try if a man be weak in the hams, by coming behind him and giving him a blow unawares; if he bend once, he will bend again.
The lords that fall from the king after they have got estates by base flattery at court and now pretend conscience, do as a vintner, that when he first sets up, you may go to his house, and carouse there; but when he grows rich, he turns conscientious, and will sell no wine upon the Sabbath Day.
Col. Goring,[1] serving first the one side and then the other, did like a good miller that knows how to grind which way soever the wind sits.
After Luther[2] had made a combustion in Germany about religion, he was sent to by the Pope, to be taken off, and offered any preferment in the Church that he would make choice of: Luther answered, if he had offered half as much at first, he would have accepted it; but now he had gone so far, he could not come back. In truth, he had made himself a greater thing than they could make him; the German princes courted him, he was become the author of a sect ever after to be called Lutherans. So have our preachers done that are against the bishops; they have made themselves greater with the people than they can be made the other way; and, therefore, there is the less probability of bringing them off.
Evil Speaking
He that speaks ill of another, commonly before he is aware, makes himself such a one as he speaks against: for if he had civility or breeding, he would forbear such kind of language.
A gallant man is above ill words; an example we have in the old Lord of Salisbury, who was a great wise man. Stone had called some lord about court, “Fool”: the lord complains and has Stone whipped; Stone cries, “I might have called my Lord of Salisbury ‘fool’ often enough before he would have had me whipped.”
Speak not ill of a great enemy, but rather give him good words, that he may use you the better if you chance to fall into his hands. The Spaniard did this when he was dying. His confessor told him (to work him to repentance) how the devil tormented the wicked that went to hell: the Spaniard, replying, called the devil “my lord”: “I hope my lord the devil is not so cruel.” His confessor reproved him. “Excuse me,” said the Don, “for calling him so; I know not into what hands I may fall, and if I happen into his I hope he will use me the better for giving him good words.”
The Measure of Things
We measure from ourselves; and as things are for our use and purpose, so we approve them. Bring a pear to the table that is rotten, we cry it down, “ ’T is naught”; but bring a medlar[3] that is rotten, and “ ’T is a fine thing”: and yet I’ll warrant you the pear thinks as well of itself as the medlar does.
We measure the excellency of other men by some excellency we conceive to be in ourselves. Nash,[4] a poet, poor enough (as poets used to be), seeing an alderman with his gold chain, upon his great horse, by way of scorn said to one of his companions, “ Do you see yon fellow, how goodly, how big he looks? Why, that fellow cannot make a blank verse!”
Nay, we measure the goodness of God from ourselves; we measure his goodness, his justice, his wisdom, by something we call just, good, or wise in ourselves; and in so doing we judge proportionably to the country fellow in the play, who said if he were a king he would live like a lord, and have peas and bacon every day, and a whip that cried, “Slash!”
重庆高考排名14250左右排位历史可以上哪些大学,具体能上什么大学
河北高考排名141780左右排位历史可以上哪些大学,具体能上什么大学
贵州高考排名122910左右排位文科可以上哪些大学,具体能上什么大学
河南高考排名13840左右排位文科可以上哪些大学,具体能上什么大学
四川电影电视学院和沈阳大学哪个好 附对比和区别排名
考浙江东方职业技术学院要多少分山西考生 附2024录取名次和最低分
云南高考排名44990左右排位理科可以上哪些大学,具体能上什么大学
黑龙江高考排名95680左右排位理科可以上哪些大学,具体能上什么大学
安徽高考排名91690左右排位理科可以上哪些大学,具体能上什么大学
岳阳职业技术学院的医学检验技术专业排名怎么样 附历年录戎数线
文山学院和韶关学院哪个好 附对比和区别排名
海南高考排名4000左右排位综合可以上哪些大学,具体能上什么大学
沈阳科技学院和广州软件学院哪个好 附对比和区别排名
重庆交通大学的能源与动力工程专业排名怎么样 附历年录戎数线
山东高考排名438500左右排位综合可以上哪些大学,具体能上什么大学
广东高考排名49880左右排位物理可以上哪些大学,具体能上什么大学
辽宁财贸学院和新疆农业大学哪个好 附对比和区别排名
青海高考排名16830左右排位理科可以上哪些大学,具体能上什么大学
广东高考排名224680左右排位物理可以上哪些大学,具体能上什么大学
皖西学院和山西中医药大学哪个好 附对比和区别排名
与挫折一起走过的日子美文
浙江海洋大学东科学生会之心系老教师美文
枫叶流泪悲伤美文
浮伤年华,让泪化作相思雨美文
纪念那些重蹈覆辙的日子美文
李泉清漫步寿光城的美文
我并没有必要这样的委屈自己讨好他情感美文
当夜幕降临的时候美文
我们的柔情只留在记忆的花园情感美文
做人的深度与宽度哲理美文
可不可以爱未完待续的情感美文
美文中秋夜雨湿桂花
做点无用而有趣的事美文
美文摘选-母亲的爱
有多少人路过我的村庄写景美文