Rousseau,
Reveries of the Solitary Walker
This book illustrates the author's paranoia. The book's summary: "The struggle
between Rousseau's yearning for solitude and his need for society is the
central theme of the Reveries." The Reveries describe
"the great French writer's sense of isolation and alienation from a world
which he felt had rejected his work."
These quotations are, of course, out of context, but I think they still have
an impact...
First walk
"A recent event as sad as it was unexpected has finally extinguished this
feeble ray of hope and shown me that my earthly destiny is irrevocably fixed
for all time. Since then, I have resigned myself utterly and recovered my
peace of mind."
"...realizing eventually that all my efforts were in vain and my self-torment
of no avail, I took the only course left to me, that of submitting to my
fate and ceasing to fight against the inevitable. This resignation has made
up for all my trials by the peace of mind it brings me, a peace of mind
incompatible with the unceasing exertions of a struggle as painful as it
was unavailing."
"They were so eager to fill up my cup of misery that neither the power of
men nor the stratagems of hell can add one drop to it. Even physical suffering
would take my mind off my misfortunes rather than adding to them. Perhaps
the cries of pain would save me the groans of unhappiness, and the laceration
of my body would prevent that of my heart."
"Actual misfortunes have little effect on me; it is easy for me to accept
those which I suffer in reality, but not those which I fear. My fevered
imagination builds them up, works on them, magnifies them, and inspects them
from every angle. They are far more of a torment to me imminent than present;
the threat is far more worse than the blow. As soon as they happen, they
lose all the terrors lent to them by imagination and appear in their true
size. I find them far less formidable than I had feared, and even in the
midst of my suffering I feel a sort of relief. In this state, freed from
all further fear and from the anxieties of hope, I shall learn from mere
habit to accept ever more easily a situation which can grow no worse; and
as my awareness of it is dulled by time they can find no further way of reviving
it. So much good my persecutors have done me by recklessly pouring out all
the shafts of their hatred. They have deprived themselves of any power over
me and henceforward I can laugh at them."
"Everything external is henceforth foreign to me. I no longer have any neighbors,
fellow-men, or brothers in this world. I live here as in some strange planet
on to which I have fallen from the one I knew. All around me I can recognize
nothing but objects which afflict and wound my heart, and I cannot look at
anything that is close to me or round about me without discovering some subject
for indignant scorn or painful emotion. Let me therefore detach my mind from
these afflicting sights; they would only cause me pain, and to no end. Alone
for the rest of my life, since it is only in myself that I find consolation,
hope and peace of mind, my only remaining duty is towards myself and this
is all I desire."
Second walk
"Today there is more recollection than creation in the products of my
imagination, a tepid languor saps all my faculties, the vital spirit is gradually
dying down within me, my soul no longer flies up without effort from its
decaying prison of flesh, and were it not for the hope of a state to which
I aspire because I feel that it is mine by right, I should now live only
in the past. Thus if I am to contemplate myself before my decline, I must
go back several years to the time when, losing all hope for this life and
finding no food left on earth for my soul, I gradually learnt to feed it
on its own substance and seek all its nourishment within myself."
"...I learnt from my own experience that the source of true happiness is
within us, and that it is not in the power of men to make anyone truly miserable
who is determined to be happy."
"The country was still green and pleasant, but it was deserted and many of
the leaves had fallen; everything gave an impression of solitude and impending
winter. This picture evoked mixed feelings of gentle sadness which were too
closely akin to my age and my experience for me not to make the comparison.
I saw myself at the close of an innocent and unhappy life, with a soul still
full of intense feelings and a mind still adorned with a few flowers, even
if they were already blighted by sadness and withered by care. Alone and
neglected, I could feel the approach of the first frosts and my failing
imagination no longer filled my solitude with beings formed after the desires
of my heart. Sighing I said to myself: What have I done in this world? I
was created to live, and I am dying without having lived."
"God is just; his will is that I should suffer, and he knows my innocence.
That is what gives me confidence. My heart and my reason cry out that I shall
not be disappointed. Let men and fate do their worst, we must learn to suffer
in silence, everything will find its proper place in the end and sooner or
later my turn will come."
Third walk
"Youth is the time to study wisdom, age the time to practise it. Experience
is always instructive, I admit, but it is only useful in the time we have
left to live. When death is already at the door, is it worth learning how
we should have lived?"
"The sad truth that time and reason have revealed to me in making me aware
of my misfortune, has convinced me that there is no remedy and that resignation
is my only course. Thus all the experience of my old age is of no use to
me in my present state, nor will it help me in the future."
"Since the days of my youth I had fixed on the age of forty as the end of
my efforts to succeed, the final term of my various ambitions. I had the
firm intention, when I reached this age, of making no further effort to climb
out of whatever situation I was in and of spending the rest of my life living
from day to day with no thought for the future. When the time came I carried
out my plan without difficulty, and although my fortune at the time seemed
to be on the point of changing permanently for the better, it was not only
without regret but with real pleasure that I gave up these prospects. In
shaking off all these lures and vain hopes, I abandoned myself entirely to
the nonchalant tranquillity which has always been my dominant taste and most
lasting inclination. I quitted the world and its vanities, I gave up all
finery--no more sword, no more watch, no more white stockings, gilt trimmings
and powder, but a simple wig and a good solid coat of broadcloth--and what
is more than all the rest, I uprooted from my heart the greed and covetousness
which gave value to all I was leaving behind. I gave up the position I was
then occupying, a position for which I was quite unsuited, and set myself
to copying music at so much a page, an occupation for which I had always
had a distinct liking."
"All the sharpest torments lose their sting if one can confidently expect
a glorious recompense, and the certainty of this recompense was the principal
fruit of my earlier meditations."
Fifth walk
"Everything is in constant flux on this earth. Nothing keeps the same unchanging
shape, and our affections, being attached to things outside us, necessarily
change and pass away as they do. Always out ahead of us or lagging behind,
they recall a past which is gone or anticipate a future which may never come
into being; there is nothing solid there for the heart to attach itself to.
Thus our earthly joys are almost without exception the creatures of a moment;
I doubt whether any of us knows the meaning of lasting happiness. Even in
our keenest pleasures there is scarcely a single moment of which the heart
could truthfully say: 'Would that this moment could last for ever!' And how
can we give the name of happiness to a fleeting state which leaves our hearts
still empty and anxious, either regretting something that is past or desiring
something that is yet to come? But if there is a state where the soul can
find a resting-place secure enough to establish itself and concentrate its
entire being there, with no need to remember the past or reach into the future,
where time is nothing to it, where the present runs on indefinitely but this
duration goes unnoticed, with no sign of the passing of time, and no other
feeling of deprivation or enjoyment, pleasure or pain, desire or fear than
the simple feeling of existence, a feeling that fills our soul entirely,
as long as this state lasts, we can call ourselves happy, not with a poor,
incomplete and relative happiness such as we find in the pleasures of life,
but with a sufficient, complete and perfect happiness which leaves no emptiness
to be filled in the soul....What is the source of our happiness in such a
state? Nothing external to us, nothing apart from ourselves and our own
existence; as long as this state lasts we are self-sufficient like God. The
feeling of existence unmixed with any other emotion is in itself a precious
feeling of peace and contentment which would be enough to make this mode
of being loved and cherished by anyone who could guard against all the earthly
and sensual influences that are constantly distracting us from it in this
life and troubling the joy it could give us. But most men being continually
stirred by passion know little of this condition, and having only enjoyed
it fleetingly and incompletely they retain no more than a dim and confused
notion of it and are unaware of its true charm. Nor would it be desirable
in our present state of affairs that the avid desire for these sweet ecstasies
should give people a distaste for the active life which their constantly
recurring needs impose upon them. But an unfortunate man who has been excluded
from human society, and can do nothing more in this world to serve or benefit
himself or others, may be allowed to seek in this state a compensation for
human joys, a compensation which neither fortune nor mankind can take away
from him."
Sixth walk
"There are types of adversity which elevate and strengthen the soul, but
there are others which depress and crush it; such is the one of which I am
a victim. If there had been the slightest leaven of evil in my soul, this
adversity would have fermented it to excess and driven me into a frenzy,
but it only succeeded in reducing me to inactivity. Unable to do good to
myself or anyone else, I abstain from acting; and this state, which is only
blameless because I cannot avoid it, makes me find a sort of satisfaction
in abandoning myself completely and without reproach to my natural inclination.
No doubt I go too far, since I avoid opportunities for action even when I
think nothing but good can come from them. But knowing that I am not allowed
to see things as they are, I refrain from judging by the appearances my enemies
give to things, and however alluring the motives for action may seem, it
is enough that they have been left within my grasp for me to be sure they
are deceptive."
"I have never believed that man's freedom consists in doing what he wants,
but rather in never doing what he does not want to do, and this is the freedom
I have always sought after and often achieved, the freedom by virtue of which
I have most scandalized my contemporaries."
Eighth walk
"In all the ills that befall us, we are more concerned by the intention than
the result. A tile that falls off a roof may injure us more seriously, but
it will not wound us so deeply as a stone thrown deliberately by a malevolent
hand. The blow may miss, but the intention always strikes home."
"Since by the light of reason I could see nothing but absurdities in the
explanations I tried to give for everything that happened to me, I realized
that, as all its causes and operations were unknown and incomprehensible
to me, I should ignore them completely, that I should regard all the details
of my fate as the workings of mere necessity, in which I should not seek
to find any intention, purpose, or moral cause, that I must submit to it
without argument or resistance since these were useless, that since all that
was left to me on earth was to regard myself as a purely passive being,
I should not waste the strength I needed to endure my fate in trying
to fight against it. This was what I told myself. My reason and my heart
assented, yet I could feel that my heart was not entirely satisfied. Whence
came this dissatisfaction? I searched and found the answer: it came from
my self-love, which, having waxed indignant against mankind, still rebelled
against reason."
Ninth walk
"Happiness is a lasting state which does not seem to be made for man in this
world. Everything here on earth is in a continual flux which allows nothing
to assume any constant form. All things change round about us, we ourselves
change, and no one can be sure of loving tomorrow what he loves today. All
our plans of happiness in this life are therefore empty dreams. Let us make
the most of peace of mind when it comes to us, taking care to do nothing
to drive it away, but not making plans to hold it fast, since such plans
are sheer folly. I have seen few if any happy people, but I have seen many
who were contented, and of all the sights that have come my way this is the
one that has left me most contented myself."
"...if my pleasures are brief and few in number, it is also true that when
they come they give me an intenser enjoyment than if I were more used
to them. I ruminate on them so to speak, turning them over frequently in
my memory, and few as they are, if they were pure and unmixed, they would
perhaps make me happier than in my days of prosperity. In extreme poverty
a little is enough to make one rich; a beggar is gladder to find one gold
coin than a rich man to find a purse full of money. People would laugh if
they could see how my soul is affected by the slightest pleasures..."
"It is only when I am alone that I am my own master, at all other times I
am the plaything of all who surround me."