or humility, if it has not something peculiar to ourself;
as also, that every cause of that passion must be
in some measure constant, and hold some proportion
to the duration of our self, which, is its object.
Now as health and sickness vary incessantly to all
men, and there is none, who is solely or certainly
fixed in either, these accidental blessings and calamities
are in a manner separated from us, and are never considered
as connected with our being and existence. And
that this account is just appears hence, that wherever
a malady of any kind is so rooted in our constitution,
that we no longer entertain any hopes of recovery,
from that moment it becomes an object of humility;
as is evident in old men, whom nothing mortifies more
than the consideration of their age and infirmities.
They endeavour, as long as possible, to conceal their
blindness and deafness, their rheums and gouts; nor
do they ever confess them without reluctance and uneasiness.
And though young men are not ashamed of every head-ach
or cold they fall into, yet no topic is so proper
to mortify human pride, and make us entertain a mean
opinion of our nature, than this, that we are every
moment of our lives subject to such infirmities.
This sufficiently proves that bodily pain and sickness
are in themselves proper causes of humility; though
the custom of estimating every thing by comparison
more than by its intrinsic worth and value, makes
us overlook these calamities, which we find to be
incident to every one, and causes us to form an idea
of our merit and character independent of them.
We are ashamed of such maladies as affect others,
and are either dangerous or disagreeable to them.
Of the epilepsy; because it gives a horror to every
one present: Of the itch; because it is infectious:
Of the king’s-evil; because it commonly goes
to posterity. Men always consider the sentiments
of others in their judgment of themselves. This
has evidently appeared in some of the foregoing reasonings;
and will appear still more evidently, and be more
fully explained afterwards,
SECT. IX OF EXTERNAL ADVANTAGES AND DISADVANTAGES
But though pride and humility have the qualities of
our mind and body that is self, for their natural
and more immediate causes, we find by experience,
that there are many other objects, which produce these
affections, and that the primary one is, in some measure,
obscured and lost by the rnultiplicity of foreign
and extrinsic. We found a vanity upon houses,
gardens, equipages, as well as upon personal merit
and accomplishments; and though these external advantages
be in themselves widely distant from thought or a
person, yet they considerably influence even a passion,
which is directed to that as its ultimate object, This,
happens when external objects acquire any particular
relation to ourselves, and are associated or connected
with us. A beautiful fish in the ocean, an animal