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forty centuries of ink-第15章

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the Greek and Roman civilization; and everywhere

darkness succeeded to light。 The religion of Jesus

Christ was alone capable of resisting this barbarian

invasion; and science and literature; together with

the arts; disappeared from the face of the earth;

taking refuge in the churches and monasteries。 It

was there that they were preserved as a sacred deposit;

and it was thence that they emerged when

Christianity had renovated pagan society。 But

centuries and centuries elapsed before the sum of

human knowledge was equal to what it had been at

the fall of the Roman empire。 A new society;

moreover; was needed for the new efforts of human

intelligence as it resumed its rights。 Schools and

universities were founded under the auspices of the

clergy and of the religious corporations; and thus

science and literature were enabled to emerge from

their tombs。 Europe; amidst the tumultuous conflicts

of the policy which made and unmade kingdoms;

witnessed a general revival of the scholastic

zeal; poets; orators; novelists; and writers increased

in numbers and grew in favour; savants; philosophers;

chemists and alchemists; mathematicians

and astronomers; travellers and naturalists; were

awakened; so to speak; by the life…giving breath of

the Middle Ages; and great scientific discoveries

and admirable works on every imaginable subject

showed that the genius of modern society was not

a whit inferior to that of antiquity。 Printing; was

invented; and with that brilliant discovery; the Middle

Ages; which had accomplished their work of

social renovation; made way for the Renaissance;

which scattered abroad in profusion the prolific and

brilliant creations of Art; Science; and Literature。〃



This author to some extent discredits himself; however;

p。 455; where he remarks:



〃Long before the invasions of the Barbarians

the histories written by Greek and Latin authors

concerning the annals of the ancient peoples had

been falling into disfavor。 Even the best of them

were little read; for the Christians felt but slight

interest in these pagan narratives; and that is why

works relating to the history of antiquity were already

so scarce。〃



Another authority writing on the same subject discusses

it from a different standpoint; remarking:



〃As in the middle ages invention busied itself

with instruments of torture; and as in our days it

is taken up almost as much with the destructive engines

of war as with the productive arts of peace;

so in those early ages it applied itself to the fabrication

of idols; to the mechanism and theatrical

contrivances for mysteries and religious ceremonies。

There was then no desire to communicate

discoveries; science was a sort of freemasonry;

and silence was effectually secured by priestly

anathemas; men of science were as jealous of one

another as they were of all other classes of society。

If we wish to form a clear picture of this earliest

stage of civilization; an age which represents at

once the naivete of childhood and the suspicious

reticence of senility; we must turn our eyes to the

priest; on the one hand; claiming as his own all art

and science; and commanding respect by his contemptuous

silence; and; on the other hand; to the

mechanic plying the loom; extracting the Tyrian

dye; practising chemistry; though ignorant of its

very name; despised and oppressed; and only tolerated

when he furnished Religion with her trappings

or War with arms。 Thus the growth of

chemistry was slow; and by reason of its backwardness

it was longer than any other art in ridding

itself of the leading…strings of magic and

astrology。 Practical discoveries must have been

made many times without science acquiring thereby

any new fact。 For to prevent a new discovery from

being lost there must be such a combination of

favorable circumstances as was rare in that age and

for many succeeding ages。 There must be publicity;

and publicity is of quite recent growth; the

application of the discovery must be not only possible

but obvious; as satisfying some want。 But

wants are only felt as civilization progresses。 Nor

is that all; for a practical discovery to become a

scientific fact it must serve to demonstrate the error

of one hypothesis; and to suggest a new one; better

fitted for the synthesis of existing facts。 But

(some) old beliefs are proverbially obstinate and

virulent in their opposition to newer and truer

theories which are destined to eject and replace

them。 To sum up; even in our own day; chemistry

rests on a less sound basis than either physics; which

had the advantage of originating as late as the 17th

century; or astronomy; which dates from the time


when the Chaldean shepherd had sufficiently provided

for his daily wants to find leisure for gazing

into the starry Heavens。〃



The observations of a still earlier commentator are of

the same general nature。 He says:



〃In the first ages of Christianity; when the

fathers of the Church; the Jews; and the Heathen

philosophers were so warmly engaged in controversy;

there is reason to believe that pious frauds

were not uncommon: and that when one party suspected

forgeries; instead of an attempt at confutation;

which might have been difficult; they had

recourse perhaps to a countermine: and either invented

altogether; or eked out some obscure traditional

scraps by the embellishments of fancy。

When we consider; amongst many literary impositions

of later times; that Psalmanazar's history of

Formosa was; even in this enlightened age and

country (England; about 1735); considered by our

most learned men as unquestionably authentic; till

the confession of the author discovered the secret;

I think it is not difficult to conceive how forgeries

of remote events; before the invention of printing

and the general diffusion of knowledge might gain

an authority; and especially with the zealous; hardly

inferior to that of the most genuine history。〃



De Vinne; however; in his 〃Invention of Printing;〃

New York; 1878; best explains the status quo of those

times; relative not only to book (MSS。) making; and

methods of circulation; but the causes which led up to

their eventual disappearance and the literary darkness

which ensued。 His remarks are so pertinent

that they are quoted at length:



〃The civilization of ancient Rome did not require

printing。 If all the processes of typography

had been revealed to its scholars the art would not

have been used。 The wants of readers and writers

were abundantly supplied by the pen。 Papyrus

paper was cheap; and scribes were numerous; Rome

had more booksellers than it needed; and books

were made faster than they could be sold。 The

professional scribes were educated slaves; who; fed

and clothed at nominal expense; and organized under

the direction of wealthy publishers; were made

so efficient in the production of books; that typography;

in an open competitio
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