[Diderot and the Encyclopaedists (Vol 1 of 2) by John Morley]@TWC D-Link book
Diderot and the Encyclopaedists (Vol 1 of 2)

CHAPTER VIII
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CHAPTER VIII.
RAMEAU'S NEPHEW.
In hypochondriacal moments, it has been said, the world, viewed from the aesthetic side, appears to many a one a cabinet of caricatures; from the intellectual side, a madhouse; and from the moral side, a harbouring place for rascals.[292] We might perhaps extend this saying beyond the accidents of hypochondriasis, and urge that the few wide, profound, and real observers of human life have all known, and known often, this fantastic consciousness of living in a strange distorted universe of lunatics, knaves, grotesques.

It is an inevitable mood to any who dare to shake the kaleidoscopic fragments out of their conventional and accepted combination.

Who does not remember deep traces of such a mood in Plato, Shakespeare, Pascal, Goethe?
And Diderot, who went near to having something of the deep quality of those sovereign spirits, did not escape, any more than they, the visitation of the misanthropic spectre.
The distinction of the greater minds is that they have no temptation to give the spectre a permanent home with them, as is done by theologians in order to prove the necessity of grace and another world, or by cynics in order to prove the wisdom of selfishness in this world.

The greater minds accept the worse facts of character for what they are worth, and bring them into a right perspective with the better facts.
They have no expectation of escaping all perplexities, nor of hitting on answers to all the moral riddles of the world.

Yet are they ever drawn by an invincible fascination to the feet of the mighty Sphinx of society.


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