【英文小说】Zadig

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1、【英文小说】ZadigPreface Quo fata trahunt, retrahuntque sequamur.Per varios casus, per tot discrimina rerum,Tendimus in Latium. VIRG.The Dedication to the Sultana Sheraa, by Sadi.The 18th of the Month Scheval, in the Year of the Hegira, 837.Thou Joy of evry Eye! Thou Torment of every Heart! Thou Intellect

2、ual Light! I do not kiss the Dust of thy Feet; because thou seldom art seen out of the Seraglio, and when thou art, thou walkest only on the Carpets of Iran, or on Beds of Roses.I here present you with a Translation of the Work of an ancient Sage, who having the Happiness of living free from all Avo

3、cations, thought proper, by Way of Amusement, to write the History of Zadig; a Performance, that comprehends in it more Instruction than, tis possible, you may at first be aware of. I beg you would indulge me so far as to read it over, and then pass your impartial Judgment upon it: For notwithstandi

4、ng you are in the Bloom of your Life; tho evry Pleasure courts you; tho you are Natures Darling, and have internal Qualities in proportion to your Beauty; tho the World resounds your Praises from Morning till Night, and consequently you must have a just Title to a superior Degree of Understanding th

5、an the rest of your Sex; Yet your Wit is no ways flashy; Your Taste is refind, and I have had the Honour to hear you talk more learnedly than the wisest Dervise, with his venerable Beard, and pointed Bonnet: You are discreet, and yet not mistrustful; you are easy, but not weak; you are beneficent wi

6、th Discretion; you love your Friends, and create yourself no Enemies. Your most sprightly Flights borrow no Graces from Detraction; you never speak a misbecoming Word, nor do an ill-naturd Action, tho tis always in your Power. In a Word, your Soul is as spotless as your Person. You have, moreover, a

7、 little Fund of Philosophy, which gives me just Grounds to hope that youll relish this Historical Performance better than any other Lady of your Quality would do.It was originally composd in the Chaldean Language, to which both you and my self are perfect Strangers. It was translated, however, into

8、Arabic, for the Amusement of the celebrated Sultan OULOUG-BEG. It first appeard in Public, when the Arabian and Persian Tales of One Thousand and One Nights, and One Thousand and One Days, were most in Vogue: OULOUG chose rather to entertain himself with the Adventures of Zadig. The Sultanas indeed

9、were more fond of the former. How can you, said the judicious OULOUG, be so partial, as to prefer a Set of Tales, that are no ways interesting or instructive, to a Work, that has a Variety of Beauties to recommend it? Oh! replied the Sultanas, the less Sense there is in them, the more they are in Ta

10、ste; and the less their Merit, the greater their Commendation.I flatter my self, thou Patroness of Wisdom, that thou wilt not copy after those thoughtless Sultanas, but give into the Sentiments of OULOUG. I am in hopes likewise, when you are tird with the Conversation of such as make those senseless

11、 Romances abovementiond their favourite Amusements, you will vouchsafe to listen for one Minute or two, to the Dictates of solid Sense. Had you been Thalestris in the Days of Scander, the Son of Philip; had you been the Queen of Sheba, in the Reign of Solomon, those Kings would have been proud to ha

12、ve taken a Tour to visit you.May the Celestial Virtues grant, that your Pleasures may meet with no Interruption; your Charms know no Decay; and may your Felicity be everlasting!SADI.The Approbation.I, Who have subscribd my Name hereto, ambitious of being thought a Man of Wit and Learning, have perus

13、d this MANUSCRIPT, which I find, to my great Mortification, amusing, moral, philosophical, and fit to be read, even by those who have an utter Aversion to Romances; for which Reason, I have depretiated it, as it deserves, and have in direct Terms told the CADI-LESQUIER, that tis a most detestable Pe

14、rformance.Chapter I. The Blind Eye.In the Reign of King Moabdar, there was a young Man, a Native of Babylon, by name Zadig; who was not only endowed by Nature with an uncommon Genius, but born of illustrious Parents, who bestowed on him an Education no ways inferior to his Birth. Tho rich and young,

15、 he knew how to give a Check to his Passions; he was no ways self-conceited; he didnt always act up to the strictest Rules of Reason himself, and knew how to look on the Foibles of others, with an Eye of Indulgence. Every one was surprizd to find, that notwithstanding he had such a Fund of Wit, he n

16、ever insulted; nay, never so much as rallied any of his Companions, for that Tittle Tattle, which was so vague and empty, so noisy and confusd; for those rash Reflections, those illiterate Conclusions, and those insipid Jokes; and, in short, for that Flow of unmeaning Words, which was calld polite Conversation in Babylon. He had learned from the first Book of Zoroaster, that Self-love is like a Bladder full bl

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