LETTER LXI
Usbek to Rhedi, at Venice
I went the other day into a famous church called
Notre Dame. While I was admiring this magnificent building I had
an opportunity of conversing with an ecclesiastic, led there, like myself,
by curiosity. The conversation turned upon the peaceful life enjoyed
by those of his profession. “Most people,” said he, “envy the happiness
of our condition, and they are right. However, it has its disadvantages:
although we are in a measure separated from the world, yet a thousand things
require our presence in it; and in this way we have a very difficult part
to fill.
“Worldly people are truly astonishing: they
can endure neither our praise nor our blame: if we desire to admonish
them, they think us ridiculous; if to commend them, they regard us as undignified.
Nothing can be more humiliating than the thought that one has offended
even the wicked. We are therefore compelled to adopt an ambiguous
method, and to influence libertines, not by a direct appeal, but by the
uncertainty in which our manner of receiving their remarks leaves them.
This requires abundance of talent, it is so difficult to maintain a neutral
attitude: men of the world who risk everything, who give themselves up
to all their fancies, dropping them or pursuing them, according to their
felicity, succeed much better.
“This is not all. We cannot preserve in the
world that happy peaceful state which is so loudly praised. As soon
as we appear there, we are forced into argument: for example, we
have to undertake to prove to a man who does not believe in God, the efficacy
of prayer; or the necessity of fasting, to another who all his life has
denied the immortality of the soul: the task is heavy, and the laughter
is not on our side. Besides this, a desire to convert others to our
own opinions, which belongs, as it were, to our profession, torments us
endlessly; and is as ridiculous as if Europeans, anxious to improve human
nature, were to try to change the Ethiopian’s skin. We disturb the
state, and torment ourselves to enforce points of religion which are not
fundamental: we are like that conqueror of China, who drove his subjects
to a general revolt, by insisting that they should cut their hair or their
nails.
“The zeal which we have to secure the fulfilment
of the duties of our holy religion on the part of those over whom
we are placed, is often dangerous, and cannot be accompanied by too much
prudence. An emperor, called Theodosius, put to the sword all the
inhabitants of a certain town, even to the women and children. Immediately
afterwards, as he was about to enter a church, a bishop, Ambrose by name,
shut the doors against him as a sacrilegious murderer: in doing so
he performed an heroic action. This emperor, having shortly done
the penance which such a crime required, and being admitted into the church,
the same bishop made him come from among the priests with whom he had seated
himself: that was the action of a fanatic. Thus you see how
true it is, that one should not be over-zealous. Of what importance
was it to religion or to the state, whether this prince had, or had not,
a place among the priests?”
Paris, the 1st of the first moon of Rebiab, 1714.