Invisible Shakespeare: Shakespeare in Adam Smith 
  
    
      
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              __________________________________________________________________ 
              Sarah 
              Skwire 
              Invisible 
              Shakespeare 
              : 
              Shakespeare 
              in 
              Adam 
              Smith 
              Readers 
              of 
              Adam 
              Smith 
              ’ 
              s 
              Theory 
              of 
              Moral 
              Sentiments 
              ( 
              TMS 
              ) 
              are 
              barely 
              four 
              paragraphs 
              into 
              the 
              work 
              before 
              Smith 
              moves 
              from 
              describing 
              the 
              ways 
              in 
              which 
              observing 
              the 
              sufferings 
              and 
              joys 
              of 
              our 
              fellow 
              humans 
              affect 
              us 
              to 
              discussing 
              how 
              interacting 
              with 
              literature 
              replicates 
              these 
              same 
              effects 
              : 
              Our 
              joy 
              for 
              the 
              deliverance 
              of 
              those 
              heroes 
              of 
              tragedy 
              or 
              romance 
              who 
              interest 
              us 
              , 
              is 
              as 
              sincere 
              as 
              our 
              grief 
              for 
              their 
              distress 
              , 
              and 
              our 
              fellow-feeling 
              with 
              their 
              misery 
              is 
              not 
              more 
              real 
              than 
              that 
              with 
              their 
              happiness 
              . 
              We 
              enter 
              into 
              their 
              gratitude 
              towards 
              those 
              faithful 
              friends 
              who 
              did 
              not 
              desert 
              them 
              in 
              their 
              difficulties 
              ; 
              and 
              we 
              heartily 
              go 
              along 
              with 
              their 
              resentment 
              against 
              those 
              perfidious 
              traitors 
              who 
              injured 
              , 
              abandoned 
              , 
              or 
              deceived 
              them 
              . 
              1 
              We 
              see 
              Smith 
              turn 
              to 
              literature 
              as 
              an 
              analogue 
              for 
              lived 
              experience 
              throughout 
              TMS 
              . 
              A 
              little 
              later 
              , 
              when 
              he 
              reminds 
              readers 
              that 
              we 
              seem 
              to 
              have 
              a 
              built-in 
              1 
              Adam 
              Smith 
              , 
              The 
              Theory 
              of 
              Moral 
              Sentiments 
              ( 
              Glasgow 
              Edition 
              of 
              the 
              Works 
              and 
              Correspondence 
              of 
              Adam 
              Smith 
              , 
              vol 
              . 
              1 
              ), 
              ed 
              . 
              D 
              . 
              D 
              . 
              Raphael 
              and 
              A 
              . 
              L 
              . 
              Macfie 
              ( 
              Indianapolis 
              : 
              Liberty 
              Fund 
              , 
              1982 
              ), 
              p 
              . 
              10 
              . 
              Publicado 
              originalmente 
              en 
              Laissez-Faire 
              , 
              No 
              . 
              38-39 
              ( 
              Marzo-Sept 
              2013 
              ): 
              17-24 
              . 
              measuring 
              stick 
              for 
              injustice 
              , 
              Smith 
              turns 
              to 
              literature 
              as 
              an 
              example 
              : 
              “ 
              The 
              villain 
              , 
              in 
              a 
              tragedy 
              or 
              romance 
              , 
              is 
              as 
              much 
              the 
              object 
              of 
              our 
              indignation 
              , 
              as 
              the 
              hero 
              is 
              that 
              of 
              our 
              sympathy 
              and 
              affection 
              . 
              We 
              detest 
              Iago 
              as 
              much 
              as 
              we 
              esteem 
              Othello 
              ; 
              and 
              delight 
              as 
              much 
              in 
              the 
              punishment 
              of 
              the 
              one 
              , 
              as 
              we 
              are 
              grieved 
              at 
              the 
              distress 
              of 
              the 
              other 
              .” 
              2 
              And 
              when 
              he 
              explains 
              the 
              way 
              we 
              realize 
              our 
              general 
              rules 
              about 
              human 
              behavior 
              , 
              he 
              points 
              out 
              that 
              it 
              is 
              partially 
              as 
              a 
              result 
              of 
              our 
              responses 
              “ 
              when 
              we 
              read 
              in 
              history 
              or 
              romance 
              .” 
              3 
              Charles 
              Griswold 
              ’ 
              s 
              Adam 
              Smith 
              and 
              the 
              Virtues 
              of 
              Enlightenment 
              points 
              to 
              the 
              strong 
              appeal 
              that 
              literature 
              had 
              for 
              Smith 
              as 
              a 
              way 
              to 
              speak 
              about 
              important 
              contemporary 
              moral 
              concerns 
              : 
              “ 
              Not 
              only 
              plays 
              , 
              novels 
              , 
              and 
              poems 
              but 
              tragedies 
              , 
              in 
              particular 
              , 
              intrigue 
              Smith 
              . 
              Together 
              they 
              completely 
              overwhelm 
              his 
              relatively 
              rare 
              references 
              to 
              properly 
              philosophical 
              texts 
              . 
              … 
              The 
              notion 
              that 
              we 
              are 
              to 
              understand 
              literature 
              and 
              drama 
              as 
              sources 
              for 
              moral 
              theory 
              and 
              moral 
              education 
              is 
              clearly 
              and 
              strikingly 
              evident 
              in 
              The 
              Wealth 
              of 
              Nations 
              as 
              well 
              .” 
              4 
              This 
              attraction 
              towards 
              2 
              Ibid 
              ., 
              p 
              . 
              34 
              . 
              3 
              Ibid 
              ., 
              p 
              . 
              160 
              . 
              4 
              Charles 
              L 
              . 
              Griswold 
              , 
              Adam 
              Smith 
              and 
              the 
              Laissez-Faire 
              , 
              No 
              . 
              60 
              ( 
              Octubre 
              2033 
              ): 
              41-48 
              
             
            
              
                
                
                
                
                
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              __________________________________________________________________ 
              the 
              literary 
              as 
              source 
              material 
              for 
              moral 
              arguments 
              is 
              easily 
              seen 
              simply 
              by 
              leafing 
              through 
              the 
              footnotes 
              to 
              any 
              of 
              Smith 
              ’ 
              s 
              works 
              . 
              His 
              references 
              to 
              literature 
              are 
              myriad 
              and 
              most 
              have 
              been 
              welldocumented 
              . 
              In 
              Economic 
              Sentiments 
              Emma 
              Rothschild 
              outlines 
              the 
              most 
              famous 
              of 
              the 
              references 
              when 
              she 
              examines 
              the 
              connection 
              between 
              Smith 
              ’ 
              s 
              idea 
              of 
              the 
              “ 
              invisible 
              hand 
              ” 
              and 
              the 
              workings 
              of 
              the 
              same 
              idea 
              in 
              Macbeth 
              . 
              She 
              writes 
              : 
              The 
              earlier 
              intellectual 
              history 
              of 
              invisible 
              hands 
              turns 
              out 
              to 
              be 
              generally 
              grim 
              . 
              The 
              most 
              famous 
              invisible 
              hand 
              in 
              Anglo-Scottish 
              literature 
              is 
              that 
              of 
              Macbeth 
              ’ 
              s 
              providence 
              . 
              “ 
              And 
              with 
              thy 
              bloody 
              and 
              invisible 
              hand 
              ,” 
              Macbeth 
              apostrophizes 
              the 
              night 
              in 
              Act 
              III 
              , 
              immediately 
              before 
              the 
              banquet 
              and 
              Banquo 
              ’ 
              s 
              murder 
              ; 
              he 
              asks 
              the 
              darkness 
              to 
              cover 
              up 
              the 
              crimes 
              he 
              is 
              about 
              to 
              commit 
              : 
              Come 
              , 
              seeling 
              night 
              , 
              Scarf 
              up 
              the 
              tender 
              eye 
              of 
              pitiful 
              day 
              , 
              And 
              with 
              thy 
              bloody 
              and 
              invisible 
              hand 
              Cancel 
              and 
              tear 
              to 
              pieces 
              that 
              great 
              bond 
              Which 
              keeps 
              me 
              pale 
              . 
              5 
              In 
              addition 
              to 
              explicit 
              quotations 
              from 
              literature 
              — 
              like 
              this 
              use 
              of 
              the 
              invisible 
              hand 
              — 
              Smith 
              ’ 
              s 
              writing 
              , 
              steeped 
              in 
              poetry 
              , 
              novels 
              , 
              and 
              drama 
              as 
              it 
              is 
              , 
              often 
              draws 
              from 
              the 
              storehouse 
              of 
              his 
              memory 
              to 
              allude 
              to 
              or 
              quote 
              from 
              literature 
              . 
              For 
              example 
              , 
              in 
              his 
              discussion 
              of 
              pride 
              , 
              Smith 
              notes 
              that 
              : 
              The 
              proud 
              man 
              is 
              commonly 
              too 
              well 
              contented 
              with 
              himself 
              to 
              think 
              that 
              his 
              character 
              requires 
              any 
              amendment 
              . 
              The 
              man 
              who 
              feels 
              himself 
              all-perfect 
              , 
              naturally 
              enough 
              despises 
              all 
              further 
              improvement 
              . 
              His 
              self-sufficiency 
              and 
              absurd 
              conceit 
              of 
              his 
              own 
              superiority 
              , 
              commonly 
              attend 
              him 
              from 
              his 
              youth 
              to 
              his 
              most 
              advanced 
              age 
              ; 
              and 
              he 
              dies 
              , 
              as 
              Hamlet 
              says 
              , 
              with 
              all 
              his 
              sins 
              upon 
              his 
              head 
              , 
              unanointed 
              , 
              unanealed 
              . 
              6 
              The 
              quotation 
              from 
              Hamlet 
              is 
              apt 
              and 
              interesting 
              , 
              but 
              equally 
              compelling 
              is 
              the 
              observation 
              , 
              in 
              the 
              footnotes 
              to 
              the 
              Glasgow 
              edition 
              , 
              that 
              “ 
              Smith 
              is 
              misquoting 
              from 
              memory 
              . 
              It 
              is 
              the 
              Ghost 
              , 
              not 
              Hamlet 
              , 
              who 
              speaks 
              thus 
              of 
              his 
              own 
              death 
              : 
              Cut 
              off 
              even 
              in 
              the 
              blossoms 
              of 
              my 
              sin 
              , 
              Unhousell 
              ’ 
              d 
              , 
              disappointed 
              , 
              unaneled 
              ; 
              No 
              reckoning 
              made 
              , 
              but 
              sent 
              to 
              my 
              account 
              With 
              all 
              my 
              imperfections 
              on 
              my 
              head 
              : 
              ( 
              Hamlet 
              , 
              i 
              . 
              v 
              . 
              76 
              – 
              9 
              .)” 
              7 
              “ 
              Unanointed 
              ” 
              is 
              an 
              ideal 
              example 
              of 
              the 
              kind 
              of 
              “ 
              memory 
              skip 
              ” 
              that 
              happens 
              when 
              someone 
              who 
              knows 
              another 
              writer 
              ’ 
              s 
              works 
              well 
              quotes 
              from 
              memory 
              . 
              The 
              word 
              makes 
              sense 
              in 
              context 
              and 
              is 
              a 
              portmanteau 
              of 
              Shakespeare 
              ’ 
              s 
              actual 
              words 
              —“ 
              unhousell 
              ’ 
              d 
              ” 
              and 
              “ 
              disappointed 
              .” 
              Smith 
              misquotes 
              similarly 
              in 
              his 
              Lectures 
              on 
              Rhetoric 
              and 
              Belle 
              Lettres 
              ( 
              though 
              it 
              is 
              worth 
              remembering 
              that 
              these 
              are 
              student 
              ’ 
              s 
              notes 
              on 
              Smith 
              ’ 
              s 
              lectures 
              and 
              the 
              errors 
              may 
              not 
              be 
              his 
              ). 
              He 
              refers 
              at 
              one 
              point 
              to 
              “ 
              the 
              slings 
              and 
              arrows 
              of 
              adverse 
              Fortune 
              ,” 
              8 
              and 
              later 
              to 
              6 
              Smith 
              , 
              The 
              Theory 
              of 
              Moral 
              Sentiments 
              , 
              pp 
              . 
              258-59 
              . 
              Virtues 
              of 
              Enlightenment 
              ( 
              Cambridge 
              : 
              Cambridge 
              University 
              Press 
              , 
              1999 
              ), 
              p 
              . 
              59 
              . 
              5 
              Emma 
              Rothschild 
              , 
              Economic 
              Sentiments 
              : 
              Adam 
              Smith 
              , 
              Condorcet 
              , 
              and 
              the 
              Enlightenment 
              ( 
              Cambridge 
              , 
              MA 
              : 
              Harvard 
              University 
              7 
              Ibid 
              . 
              ( 
              note 
              ). 
              8 
              Adam 
              Smith 
              , 
              Lectures 
              on 
              Rhetoric 
              and 
              Belles 
              Lettres 
              ( 
              Glasgow 
              Edition 
              of 
              the 
              Works 
              and 
              Correspondence 
              of 
              Adam 
              Smith 
              , 
              vol 
              . 
              4 
              ), 
              ed 
              . 
              J 
              . 
              C 
              . 
              Bryce 
              ( 
              Indianapolis 
              : 
              Liberty 
              Fund 
              , 
              Press 
              , 
              2001 
              ), 
              pp 
              . 
              118-19 
              . 
              1985 
              ), 
              p 
              . 
              28 
              . 
              __________________________________________________________________ 
              42 
              
             
            
              
                
                
                
                
                
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              __________________________________________________________________ 
              Shakespeare 
              ’ 
              s 
              comment 
              that 
              we 
              need 
              to 
              “ 
              bravely 
              arm 
              ourselves 
              and 
              stem 
              a 
              sea 
              of 
              troubles 
              .” 
              9 
              Both 
              of 
              these 
              errors 
              are 
              precisely 
              the 
              kind 
              of 
              memory 
              skip 
              every 
              lecturer 
              has 
              made 
              , 
              particularly 
              when 
              lecturing 
              about 
              material 
              with 
              which 
              we 
              are 
              so 
              familiar 
              that 
              , 
              as 
              Smith 
              ’ 
              s 
              student 
              notes 
              of 
              Lecture 
              XXI 
              , 
              “ 
              this 
              Lecture 
              was 
              delivered 
              intirely 
              without 
              Book 
              .” 
              10 
              This 
              particular 
              kind 
              of 
              mistake 
              suggests 
              that 
              Smith 
              had 
              a 
              particular 
              kind 
              of 
              relationship 
              with 
              Shakespeare 
              ’ 
              s 
              work 
              , 
              and 
              with 
              the 
              works 
              of 
              other 
              literary 
              figures 
              he 
              frequently 
              references 
              . 
              He 
              knows 
              these 
              works 
              the 
              way 
              that 
              many 
              economists 
              know 
              Hayek 
              or 
              Mises 
              . 
              They 
              are 
              a 
              part 
              of 
              his 
              mental 
              furniture 
              . 
              This 
              means 
              that 
              for 
              students 
              of 
              literature 
              who 
              turn 
              their 
              attention 
              to 
              Smith 
              , 
              there 
              is 
              a 
              sense 
              of 
              delight 
              — 
              but 
              no 
              surprise 
              — 
              to 
              find 
              Shakespeare 
              infusing 
              Smith 
              ’ 
              s 
              text 
              not 
              only 
              in 
              direct 
              references 
              and 
              passing 
              quotation 
              from 
              memory 
              , 
              but 
              also 
              in 
              a 
              series 
              of 
              buried 
              , 
              perhaps 
              half-conscious 
              or 
              unconscious 
              , 
              references 
              that 
              ( 
              to 
              amuse 
              myself 
              ) 
              I 
              am 
              calling 
              “ 
              Invisible 
              Shakespeare 
              .” 
              hound 
              , 
              or 
              a 
              greyhound 
              from 
              a 
              spaniel 
              , 
              or 
              this 
              last 
              from 
              a 
              shepherd 
              ’ 
              s 
              dog 
              . 
              Those 
              different 
              tribes 
              of 
              animals 
              , 
              however 
              , 
              though 
              all 
              of 
              the 
              same 
              species 
              , 
              are 
              of 
              scarce 
              any 
              use 
              to 
              one 
              another 
              . 
              The 
              strength 
              of 
              the 
              mastiff 
              is 
              not 
              , 
              in 
              the 
              least 
              , 
              supported 
              either 
              by 
              the 
              swiftness 
              of 
              the 
              greyhound 
              , 
              or 
              by 
              the 
              sagacity 
              of 
              the 
              spaniel 
              , 
              or 
              by 
              the 
              docility 
              of 
              the 
              shepherd 
              ’ 
              s 
              dog 
              . 
              The 
              effects 
              of 
              those 
              different 
              geniuses 
              and 
              talents 
              , 
              for 
              want 
              of 
              the 
              power 
              or 
              disposition 
              to 
              barter 
              and 
              exchange 
              , 
              cannot 
              be 
              brought 
              into 
              a 
              common 
              stock 
              , 
              and 
              do 
              not 
              in 
              the 
              least 
              contribute 
              to 
              the 
              better 
              accommodations 
              and 
              conveniency 
              of 
              the 
              species 
              . 
              Each 
              animal 
              is 
              still 
              obliged 
              to 
              support 
              and 
              defend 
              itself 
              , 
              separately 
              and 
              independently 
              , 
              and 
              derives 
              no 
              sort 
              of 
              advantage 
              from 
              that 
              variety 
              of 
              talents 
              with 
              which 
              nature 
              has 
              distinguished 
              its 
              fellows 
              . 
              Among 
              men 
              , 
              on 
              the 
              contrary 
              , 
              the 
              most 
              dissimilar 
              geniuses 
              are 
              of 
              use 
              to 
              one 
              another 
              ; 
              the 
              different 
              produces 
              of 
              their 
              respective 
              talents 
              , 
              by 
              the 
              general 
              disposition 
              to 
              truck 
              , 
              barter 
              , 
              and 
              exchange 
              , 
              being 
              brought 
              , 
              as 
              it 
              were 
              , 
              into 
              a 
              common 
              stock 
              , 
              where 
              every 
              man 
              may 
              purchase 
              whatever 
              part 
              of 
              the 
              produce 
              of 
              other 
              men 
              ’ 
              s 
              talents 
              he 
              has 
              occasion 
              for 
              . 
              11 
              Very 
              early 
              in 
              Adam 
              Smith 
              ’ 
              s 
              Wealth 
              of 
              Nations 
              the 
              reader 
              encounters 
              one 
              such 
              reference 
              , 
              previously 
              unnoted 
              in 
              Smith 
              scholarship 
              , 
              during 
              Smith 
              ’ 
              s 
              meditations 
              on 
              human 
              nature 
              as 
              demonstrated 
              in 
              comparison 
              with 
              the 
              nature 
              of 
              dogs 
              . 
              The 
              section 
              is 
              a 
              justly 
              famous 
              one 
              . 
              It 
              is 
              elegant 
              in 
              both 
              its 
              content 
              and 
              its 
              diction 
              as 
              well 
              as 
              in 
              its 
              explication 
              of 
              the 
              social 
              advantages 
              and 
              “ 
              conveniency 
              ” 
              that 
              arise 
              from 
              the 
              human 
              ability 
              to 
              “ 
              truck 
              , 
              barter 
              , 
              and 
              exchange 
              ”: 
              By 
              nature 
              a 
              philosopher 
              is 
              not 
              in 
              genius 
              and 
              disposition 
              half 
              so 
              different 
              from 
              a 
              street 
              porter 
              , 
              as 
              a 
              mastiff 
              is 
              from 
              a 
              grey- 
              9 
              Ibid 
              ., 
              pp 
              . 
              30-31 
              ( 
              italics 
              added 
              ). 
              This 
              passage 
              has 
              been 
              analyzed 
              often 
              . 
              What 
              has 
              gone 
              unnoticed 
              , 
              however 
              , 
              is 
              that 
              Smith 
              ’ 
              s 
              passage 
              alludes 
              to 
              an 
              equally 
              well-known 
              passage 
              from 
              Shakespeare 
              ’ 
              s 
              Macbeth 
              . 
              ( 
              The 
              play 
              may 
              have 
              been 
              brought 
              to 
              Smith 
              ’ 
              s 
              mind 
              by 
              his 
              use 
              of 
              the 
              word 
              “ 
              porter 
              ” 
              early 
              on 
              in 
              the 
              passage 
              , 
              reminding 
              him 
              of 
              Macbeth 
              ’ 
              s 
              famous 
              Act 
              II 
              “ 
              porter 
              scene 
              .”) 
              Suborning 
              Banquo 
              ’ 
              s 
              murder 
              in 
              Act 
              III 
              , 
              Macbeth 
              discusses 
              human 
              nature 
              with 
              the 
              murderers 
              for 
              hire 
              in 
              almost 
              precisely 
              the 
              same 
              terms 
              that 
              Smith 
              uses 
              in 
              the 
              above 
              passage 
              : 
              11 
              Adam 
              Smith 
              , 
              An 
              Inquiry 
              into 
              the 
              Nature 
              and 
              Causes 
              of 
              the 
              Wealth 
              of 
              Nations 
              ( 
              Glasgow 
              Edition 
              of 
              the 
              Works 
              and 
              Correspondence 
              of 
              Adam 
              Smith 
              , 
              vol 
              . 
              1 
              ), 
              ed 
              . 
              R 
              . 
              H 
              . 
              Campbell 
              , 
              A 
              . 
              S 
              . 
              Skinner 
              and 
              W 
              . 
              B 
              . 
              Todd 
              ( 
              Indian- 
              10Ibid 
              ., 
              p 
              . 
              117 
              . 
              apolis 
              : 
              Liberty 
              Fund 
              , 
              1981 
              ), 
              p 
              . 
              30 
              . 
              __________________________________________________________________ 
              43 
              
             
            
              
                
                
                
                
                
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              __________________________________________________________________ 
              First 
              Murderer 
              : 
              We 
              are 
              men 
              , 
              my 
              Liege 
              . 
              Macbeth 
              : 
              Ay 
              , 
              in 
              the 
              catalogue 
              ye 
              go 
              for 
              men 
              ; 
              As 
              hounds 
              and 
              greyhounds 
              , 
              mongrels 
              , 
              spaniels 
              , 
              curs 
              , 
              Shoughs 
              , 
              water-rugs 
              , 
              and 
              demiwolves 
              are 
              clept 
              All 
              by 
              the 
              name 
              of 
              dogs 
              : 
              the 
              valu 
              ’ 
              d 
              file 
              Distinguishes 
              the 
              swift 
              , 
              the 
              slow 
              , 
              the 
              subtle 
              , 
              The 
              housekeeper 
              , 
              the 
              hunter 
              , 
              every 
              one 
              According 
              to 
              the 
              gift 
              which 
              bounteous 
              Nature 
              Hath 
              in 
              him 
              clos 
              ’ 
              d 
              ; 
              whereby 
              he 
              does 
              receive 
              Particular 
              addition 
              , 
              from 
              the 
              bill 
              That 
              writes 
              them 
              all 
              alike 
              : 
              and 
              so 
              of 
              men 
              . 
              ( 
              Macbeth 
              , 
              3 
              . 
              1 
              . 
              90-100 
              ) 
              The 
              similarity 
              of 
              wording 
              , 
              of 
              subject 
              matter 
              , 
              even 
              of 
              the 
              dog 
              breeds 
              mentioned 
              make 
              it 
              clear 
              that 
              as 
              Smith 
              wrote 
              his 
              passage 
              on 
              dogs 
              and 
              human 
              nature 
              , 
              Shakespeare 
              ’ 
              s 
              lines 
              were 
              in 
              his 
              mind 
              . 
              Thus 
              , 
              it 
              was 
              a 
              great 
              pleasure 
              to 
              find 
              another 
              apparent 
              reference 
              to 
              Macbeth 
              in 
              TMS 
              . 
              In 
              his 
              section 
              on 
              “ 
              The 
              Effects 
              of 
              Prosperity 
              and 
              Adversity 
              upon 
              the 
              Judgment 
              of 
              Mankind 
              with 
              regard 
              to 
              the 
              Propriety 
              of 
              Action 
              ” 
              Smith 
              gives 
              an 
              extended 
              account 
              of 
              the 
              dangerous 
              risks 
              associated 
              with 
              desiring 
              too 
              rapid 
              and 
              easy 
              a 
              rise 
              to 
              a 
              position 
              of 
              wealth 
              and 
              esteem 
              : 
              To 
              attain 
              to 
              this 
              envied 
              situation 
              , 
              the 
              candidates 
              for 
              fortune 
              too 
              frequently 
              abandon 
              the 
              paths 
              of 
              virtue 
              ; 
              for 
              unhappily 
              , 
              the 
              road 
              which 
              leads 
              to 
              the 
              one 
              , 
              and 
              that 
              which 
              leads 
              to 
              the 
              other 
              , 
              lie 
              sometimes 
              in 
              very 
              opposite 
              directions 
              . 
              But 
              the 
              ambitious 
              man 
              flatters 
              himself 
              that 
              , 
              in 
              the 
              splendid 
              situation 
              to 
              which 
              he 
              advances 
              , 
              he 
              will 
              have 
              so 
              many 
              means 
              of 
              commanding 
              the 
              respect 
              and 
              admiration 
              of 
              mankind 
              , 
              and 
              will 
              be 
              enabled 
              to 
              act 
              with 
              such 
              superior 
              propriety 
              and 
              grace 
              , 
              that 
              the 
              lustre 
              of 
              his 
              future 
              conduct 
              will 
              entirely 
              cover 
              , 
              or 
              efface 
              , 
              the 
              foulness 
              of 
              the 
              steps 
              by 
              which 
              he 
              arrived 
              at 
              that 
              elevation 
              . 
              In 
              many 
              governments 
              the 
              candidates 
              for 
              the 
              highest 
              stations 
              are 
              above 
              the 
              law 
              ; 
              and 
              , 
              if 
              they 
              can 
              attain 
              the 
              object 
              of 
              their 
              ambition 
              , 
              they 
              have 
              no 
              fear 
              of 
              being 
              called 
              to 
              account 
              for 
              the 
              means 
              by 
              which 
              they 
              acquired 
              it 
              . 
              They 
              often 
              endeavour 
              , 
              therefore 
              , 
              not 
              only 
              by 
              fraud 
              and 
              falsehood 
              , 
              the 
              ordinary 
              and 
              vulgar 
              arts 
              of 
              intrigue 
              and 
              cabal 
              ; 
              but 
              sometimes 
              by 
              the 
              perpetration 
              of 
              the 
              most 
              enormous 
              crimes 
              , 
              by 
              murder 
              and 
              assassination 
              , 
              by 
              rebellion 
              and 
              civil 
              war 
              , 
              to 
              supplant 
              and 
              destroy 
              those 
              who 
              oppose 
              or 
              stand 
              in 
              the 
              way 
              of 
              their 
              greatness 
              . 
              They 
              more 
              frequently 
              miscarry 
              than 
              succeed 
              ; 
              and 
              commonly 
              gain 
              nothing 
              but 
              the 
              disgraceful 
              punishment 
              which 
              is 
              due 
              to 
              their 
              crimes 
              . 
              But 
              , 
              though 
              they 
              should 
              be 
              so 
              lucky 
              as 
              to 
              attain 
              that 
              wished-for 
              greatness 
              , 
              they 
              are 
              always 
              most 
              miserably 
              disappointed 
              in 
              the 
              happiness 
              which 
              they 
              expect 
              to 
              enjoy 
              in 
              it 
              . 
              It 
              is 
              not 
              ease 
              or 
              pleasure 
              , 
              but 
              always 
              honour 
              , 
              of 
              one 
              kind 
              or 
              another 
              , 
              though 
              frequently 
              an 
              honour 
              very 
              ill 
              understood 
              , 
              that 
              the 
              ambitious 
              man 
              really 
              pursues 
              . 
              But 
              the 
              honour 
              of 
              his 
              exalted 
              station 
              appears 
              , 
              both 
              in 
              his 
              own 
              eyes 
              and 
              in 
              those 
              of 
              other 
              people 
              , 
              polluted 
              and 
              defiled 
              by 
              the 
              baseness 
              of 
              the 
              means 
              through 
              which 
              he 
              rose 
              to 
              it 
              . 
              Though 
              by 
              the 
              profusion 
              of 
              every 
              liberal 
              expence 
              ; 
              though 
              by 
              excessive 
              indulgence 
              in 
              every 
              profligate 
              pleasure 
              , 
              the 
              wretched 
              , 
              but 
              usual 
              , 
              resource 
              of 
              ruined 
              characters 
              ; 
              though 
              by 
              the 
              hurry 
              of 
              public 
              business 
              , 
              or 
              by 
              the 
              prouder 
              and 
              more 
              dazzling 
              tumult 
              of 
              war 
              , 
              he 
              may 
              endeavour 
              to 
              efface 
              , 
              both 
              from 
              his 
              own 
              memory 
              and 
              from 
              that 
              of 
              other 
              people 
              , 
              the 
              remembrance 
              of 
              what 
              he 
              has 
              done 
              ; 
              that 
              remembrance 
              never 
              fails 
              to 
              pursue 
              him 
              . 
              He 
              invokes 
              in 
              vain 
              the 
              dark 
              and 
              dismal 
              powers 
              of 
              forgetfulness 
              and 
              oblivion 
              . 
              He 
              remembers 
              himself 
              what 
              he 
              has 
              done 
              , 
              and 
              that 
              remembrance 
              tells 
              him 
              that 
              other 
              people 
              must 
              likewise 
              remember 
              it 
              . 
              Amidst 
              all 
              the 
              gaudy 
              pomp 
              of 
              the 
              most 
              __________________________________________________________________ 
              44