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Works (1782)
PRIEST - Come to this the fatal hour when at last from the eyes of
deluded man the scales must fall away, and be shown the cruel picture of
his errors and his vices - say, my son, do you not repent the host of sins
unto which you were led by weakness and human frailty?
DYING MAN - Yes, my friend, I do repent.
PRIEST - Rejoice then in these pangs of remorse, during the brief space
remaining to you profit therefrom to obtain Heaven’s general absolution
for your sins, and be mindful of it, only through the mediation of the
Most Holy Sacrament of penance will you be granted it by the Eternal.
DYING MAN - I do not understand you, any more than you have understood me.
PRIEST - Eh?
DYING MAN - I told you that I repented.
PRIEST - I heard you say it.
DYING MAN - Yes, but without understanding it.
PRIEST - My interpretation -
DYING MAN - Hold. I shall give you mine. By Nature created, created with
very keen tastes, with very strong passions; placed on this earth for the
sole purpose of yielding to them and satisfying them, and these effects of
my creation being naught but necessities directly relating to Nature’s
fundamental designs or, if you prefer, naught but essential derivatives
proceeding from her intentions in my regard, all in accordance with her
laws, I repent not having acknowledged her omnipotence as fully as I might
have done, I am only sorry for the modest use I made of the faculties
(criminal in your view, perfectly ordinary in mine) she gave me to serve
her; I did sometimes resist her, I repent it. Misled by your absurd
doctrines, with them for arms I mindlessly challenged the desires
instilled in me by a much diviner inspiration, and thereof do I repent: I
only plucked an occasional flower when I might have gathered an ample
harvest of fruit - such are the just grounds for the regrets I have, do me
the honor of considering me incapable of harboring any others.
PRIEST - Lo! where your fallacies take you, to what pass are you brought
by your sophistries! To created being you ascribe all the Creator’s
power, and those unlucky penchants which have led you astray, ah! do you
not see they are merely the products of corrupted nature, to which you
attribute omnipotence?
DYING MAN -Friend - it looks to me as though your dialectic were as false
as your thinking. Pray straighten your arguing or else leave me to die in
peace. What do you mean by Creator, and what do you mean by corrupted
nature?
PRIEST - The Creator is the master of the universe, ‘tis He who has
wrought everything, everything created, and who maintains it all through
the mere fact of His omnipotence.
DYING MAN - An impressive figure indeed. Tell me now why this so very
formidable fellow did nevertheless, as you would have it, create a
corrupted nature?
PRIEST - What glory would men ever have, had not God left them free will;
and in the enjoyment thereof, what merit could come to them, were there
not on earth the possibility of doing good and that of avoiding evil?
DYING MAN - And so your god bungled his work deliberately, in order to
tempt or test his creature - did he then not know, did he then not doubt
what the result would be?
PRIEST - He knew it undoubtedly but, once again, he wished to leave man
the merit of choice.
DYING MAN - And to what purpose, since from the outset he knew the course
affairs would take and since, all-mighty as you tell me he is, he had but
to make his creature choose as suited him?
PRIEST - Who is there can penetrate God’s vast and infinite designs
regarding man, and who can grasp all that makes up the universal scheme?
DYING MAN - Anyone who simplifies matters, my friend, anyone, above all,
who refrains from multiplying causes in order to confuse effects all the
more. What need have you of a second difficulty when you are unable to
resolve the first, and once it is possible that Nature may have all alone
done what you attrubute to your god, why must you go looking for someone
to be her overlord? The cause and explanation of what you do not
understand may perhaps be the simplest thing in the world. Perfect your
physics and you will understand Nature better, refine your reason, banish
your prejudices and you’ll have no further need of your god.
PRIEST - Wretched man! I took you for no worse than a Socinian - arms I
had to combat you. But ‘tis clear you are an athiest, and seeing that
your heart is shut to the authentic and innumerable proofs we receive
every day of our lives of the Creator’s existence - I have no more to
say to you. There is no restoring the blind to the light.
DYING MAN - Softly, my friend, own that between the two, he who blindfolds
himself must surely see less of the light than he who snatches the
blindfold away from his eyes. You compose, you construct, you dream, you
magnify and complicate; I sift, I simplify. You accumulate errors, pile
one atop the other; I combat them all. Which one of us is blind?
PRIEST - Then you do not believe in God at all?
DYING MAN - No. And for one very sound reason: it is perfectly impossible
to believe in what one does not understand. Between understanding and
faith immediate connections must subsist; understanding is the very
lifeblood of faith; where understanding has ceased, faith is dead; and
when they who are in such a case proclaim they have faith, they deceive.
You yourself, preacher, I defy you to believe in the god you predicate
to me - you must fail because you cannot demonstrate him to me, because it
is not in you to define him to me, because consequently you do not
understand him - because as of the moment you do not understand him, you
can no longer furnish me any reasonable argument concerning him, and
because, in sum, anything beyond the limits and grasp of the human mind is
either illusion or futility; and because your god having to be one or the
other of the two, in the first instance I should be mad to believe in him,
in the second a fool.
My friend, prove to me that matter is inert and I will grant you a
creator, prove to me that Nature does not suffice to herself and I’ll
let you imagine her ruled by a higher force; until then, expect nothing
from me, I bow to evidence only, and evidence I perceive only through my
senses: my belief goes no farther than they, beyond that point my faith
collapses. I believe in the sun because I see it, I conceive it as the
focal center of all the inflammable matter in Nature, its periodic
movement pleases but does not amaze me. ‘Tis a mechanical operation,
perhaps as simple as the workings of electricity, but which we are unable
to understand.
Need I bother more about it? when you have roofed everything over with
your god, will I be any the better off? and shall I still not have to make
an effort at least as great to understand the artisan as to define his
handiwork? By edifying your chimera it is thus no service you have
rendered me, you have made me uneasy in my mind but you have not
enlightened it, and instead of gratitude I owe you resentment.
Your god is a machine you fabricated in your passions’ behalf, you
manipulated it to their liking; but the day it interfered with mine, I
kicked it out of my way, deem it fitting that I did so; and now, at this
moment when I sink and my soul stands in need of calm and philosophy,
belabor it not with your riddles and your cant, which alarm but will not
convince it, which will irritate without improving it; good friends and on
the best terms have we ever been, this soul and I, so Nature wished it to
be; as it is, so she expressly modeled it, for my soul is the result of
the dispositions she formed in me pursuant to her own ends and needs; and
as she has an equal need of vices and virtues, whenever she was pleased to
move me to evil, she did so, whenever she wanted a good deed from me, she
roused in me the desire to perform one, and even so I did as I was bid.
Look nowhere but to her workings for the unique cause of our fickle human
behavior, and in her laws hope to find no other springs than her will and
her requirements.
PRIEST - And so whatever is in this world, is necessary.
DYING MAN - Exactly.
PRIEST - But is everything is necessary - then the whole is regulated.
DYING MAN - I am not the one to deny it.
PRIEST - And what can regulate the whole save it be an all-powerful and
all-knowing hand?
DYING MAN - Say, is it not necessary that gunpowder ignite when you set a
spark to it?
PRIEST - Yes.
DYING MAN - And do you find any presence of wisdom in that?
PRIEST - None.
DYING MAN - It is then possible that things necessarily come about without
being determined by a superior intelligence, and possible hence that
everything derive logically from a primary cause, without there being
either reason or wisdom in that primary cause.
PRIEST - What are you aiming at?
DYING MAN - At proving to you that the world and all therein may be what
it is and as you see it to be, without any wise and reasoning cause
directing it, and that natural effects must have natural causes: natural
causes sufficing, there is no need to invent any such unnatural ones as
your god who himself, as I have told you already, would require to be
explained and who would at the same time be the explanation of nothing;
and that once ‘tis plain your god is superfluous, he is perfectly
useless; that what is useless would greatly appear to be imaginary only,
null and therefore non-existent; thus, to conclude that your god is a
fiction I need no other argument than that which furnishes me the
certitude of his inutility.
PRIEST - At that rate there is no great need for me to talk to you about
religion.
DYING MAN - True, but why not anyhow? Nothing so much amuses me as this
sign of the extent to which human beings have been carried away by
fanaticism and stupidity; although the prodigious spectacle of folly we
are facing here may be horrible, it is always interesting. Answer me
honestly, and endeavor to set personal considerations aside: were I weak
enough to fall victim to your silly theories concerning the fabulous
existence of the being who renders religion necessary, under what form
would you advise me to worship him? Would you have me adopt the daydreams
of Confucius rather than the absurdities of Brahma, should I kneel before
the great snake to which the blacks pray, invoke the Peruvian’s sun or
Moses’ Lord of Hosts, to which Mohammedan sect should I rally, or which
Christian heresy would be preferable in your view? Be careful how you
reply.
PRIEST - Can it be doubtful?
DYING MAN - Then ‘tis egotistical.
PRIEST - No, my son, ‘tis as much out of love for thee as for myself I
urge thee to embrace my creed.
DYING MAN - And I wonder how the one or the other of us can have much love
for himself, to deign to listen to such degrading nonsense.
PRIEST - But who can be mistaken about the miracles wrought by our Divine
Redeemer?
DYING MAN - He who sees in him anything else than the most vulgar of all
tricksters and the most arrent of all imposters.
PRIEST - O God, you hear him and your wrath thunders not forth!
DYING MAN - No my friend, all is peace and quiet around us, because your
god, be it from impotence or from reason or from whatever you please, is a
being whose existence I shall momentarily concede out of condescension for
you or, if you prefer, in order to accommodate myself to your sorry little
perspective; because this god, I say, were he to exist, as you are mad
enough to believe, could not have selected as means to persuade us,
anything more ridiculous than those your Jesus incarnates.
PRIEST - What! the prophecies, the miracles, the martyrs - are they not so
many proofs?
DYING MAN - How, so long as I abide by the rules of logic, how would you
have me accept as proof anything which itself is lacking proof? Before a
prophecy could constitute proof I should first have to be completely
certain it was ever pronounced; the prophecies history tells us of belong
to history and for me they can only have the force of other historical
facts, whereof three out of four are exceedingly dubious; if to this I add
the strong probability that they have been transmitted to us by not very
objective historians, who recorded what they preferred to have us read, I
shall be quite within my rights if I am Skeptical. And furthermore, who is
there to assure me that this prophecy was not made after the fact, that it
was not a stratagem of everyday political scheming, like that which
predicts a happy reign under a just king, or frost in wintertime?
As for your miracles, I am not any readier to be taken in by such
rubbish. All rascals have performed them, all fools have believed in them;
before I’d be persuaded of the truth of a miracle I would have to be
very sure the event so called by you was absolutely contrary to the laws
of Nature, for only what is outside of Nature can pass for miraculous; and
who is so deeply learned in Nature that he can affirm the precise point
where it is infringed upon?
Only two things are needed to accredit an alleged miracle, a mountebank
and a few simpletons; tush, there’s the whole origin of your prodigies;
all new adherents to a religious sect have wrought some; and more
extraordinary still, all have found imbeciles around to believe them.
Your Jesus’ feats do not surpass those of Apollonius of Tyana, yet
nobody thinks to take the latter for a god; and when we come to your
martyrs, assuredly, these are the feeblest of all your arguments. To
produce martyrs you need but to have enthusiasm on the one hand,
resistance on the other; and so long as an opposed cause offers me as many
of them as does yours, I shall never be sufficiently authorized to believe
one better than the other, but rather very much inclined to consider all
of them pitiable.
Ah my friend! were it true that the god you preach did exist, would he
need miracle, martyr, or prophecy to secure recognition? and if, as you
declare, the human heart were of his making, would he not have chosen it
for the repository of his law? Then would this law, impartial for all
mankind because emanating from a just god, then would it be found graved
deep and writ clear in all men alike, and from one end of the world to the
other, all men, having this delicate and sensitive organ in common, would
also resemble each other through the homage they would render the god
whence they had got it; all would adore and serve him in one identical
manner, and they would be as incapable of disregarding this god as of
resisting the inward impulse to worship him.
Instead of that, what do I behold throughout this world? As many gods
as there are countries; as many different cults as there are different
minds or different imaginations; and this swarm of opinions among which it
physically impossible for me to choose, say now, is this a just god’s
doing? Fie upon you, preacher, you outrage your god when you present him
to me thus; rather let me deny him completely, for if he exists then I
outrage him far less by my incredulity than do you through your
blasphemies.
Return to your senses, preacher, your Jesus is no better than Mohammed,
Mohammed no better than Moses, and the three of them combined no better
than Confucius, who did after all have some wise things to say while the
others did naught but rave; in general, though, such people are all mere
frauds: philosophers laughed at them, the mob believed them, and justice
ought to have hanged them.
PRIEST - Alas, justice dealt only too harshly with one of the four.
DYING MAN - If he alone got what he deserved it was he who deserved it
most richly; seditious, turbulent, calumniating, dishonest, libertine, a
clumsy buffoon, and very mischievous; he had the art of overawing common
folk and stirring up the rabble; and hence came in line for punishment in
a kingdom where the state of affairs was what it was in Jerusalem then.
They were very wise indeed to get rid of him, and this perhaps is one case
in which my extremely lenient and also extremely tolerant maxims are able
to allow the severity of Themis; I excuse any misbehavior save that which
may endanger the government one lives under, kings and their majesties are
the only thing I respect; and whoever does not love his country and his
king were better dead than alive.
PRIEST - But you do surely believe something awaits us after this life,
you must at some time or another have sought to pierce the dark shadows
enshrouding our mortal fate, and what other theory could have satisfied
your anxious spirit, than that of the numberless woes that betide him who
has lived wickedly, and an eternity of rewards for him whose life has been
good?
DYING MAN - What other, my friend? that of nothingness, it has never held
terrors for me, in it I see naught but what is consoling and
unpretentious; all other theories are of pride’s composition, this one
alone is of reason’s. Moreover, ‘tis neither dreadful nor absolute,
this nothingness. Before my eyes have I not the example of Nature’s
perpetual generations and regenerations? Nothing perishes in the world, my
friend, nothing is lost; man today, worm tomorrow, the day after tomorrow
a fly; is it not to keep steadily on existing? And what entitles me to be
rewarded for virtues which are in me through no fault of my own, or again
punished for crimes wherefore the ultimate responsibility is not mine? how
are you to put your alleged god’s goodness into tune with this system,
and can he have wished to create me in order to reap pleasure from
punishing me, and that solely on account of a choice he does not leave me
free will to determine?
PRIEST - You are free.
DYING MAN - Yes, in terms of your prejudices; but reason puts them to
rout, and the theory of human freedom was never devised except to
fabricate that of grace, which was to acquire such importance in your
reveries. What man on earth, seeing the scaffold a step beyond the crime,
would commit it were he free not to commit it? We are the pawns of an
irresistable force, and never for an instant is it within our power to do
anything but make the best of our lot and forge ahead along the path that
has been traced for us. There is not a single virtue which is not
necessary to Nature and conversely not a single crime which she does not
need and it is in the perfect balance she maintains between the one and
the other that her immense science consists; but can we be guilty for
adding our weight to this side or that when it is she who tosses us onto
the scales? no more so than the hornet who thrusts his dart into your
skin.
PRIEST - Then we should not shrink from the worst of all crimes.
DYING MAN - I say nothing of the kind. Let the evil deed be proscribed by
law, let justice smite the criminal, that will be deterrent enough; but if
by misfortune we do commit it even so, let’s not cry over spilled milk;
remorse is inefficacious, since it does not stay us from crime, futile
since it does not repair it, therefore it is absurd to beat one’s
breast, more absurd still to dread being punished in another world if we
have been lucky to escape it in this. God forbid that this be construed as
encouragement to crime, no, we should avoid it as much as we can, but one
must learn to shun it through reason and not through false fears which
lead to naught and whose effects are so quickly overcome in any moderately
steadfast soul.
Reason, sir - yes, our reason alone should warn us that harm done our
fellows can never bring happiness to us; and our heart, that contributing
to their felicity is the greatest joy Nature has accorded us on earth; the
entirety of human morals is contained in this one phrase: Render others
as happy as one desires oneself to be, and never inflict more pain
upon them than one would like to receive at their hands. There you are, my
friend, those are the only principles we should observe, and you need
neither god nor religion to appreciate and subscribe to them, you need
only have a good heart.
But I feel my strength ebbing away; preacher, put away your prejudices,
unbend, be a man, be human, without fear and without hope forget your gods
and your religions too: they are none of them good for anything but to set
man at odds with man, and the mere name of these horrors has caused
greater loss of life on earth than all other wars and all other plagues
combined. Renounce the idea of another world; there is none, but do not
renounce the pleasure of being happy and of making for happiness in this.
Nature offers you no other way of doubling your existence, of extending
it. -
My friend, lewd pleasures were ever dearer to me than anything else, I
have idolized them all my life and my wish has been to end it in their
bosom; my end draws near, six women lovelier than the light of day are
waiting in the chamber adjoining, I have reserved them for this moment,
partake of the feast with me, following my example embrace them instead of
the vain sophistries of superstition, under their caresses strive for a
little while to forget your hypocritical beliefs.
NOTE
The dying man rang, the women entered; and after he had been a little
while in their arms the preacher became one whom Nature had corrupted, all
because he had not succeeded in explaining what a corrupt nature is.
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