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<issue>
<title>The Spectator 255</title>
<header>
  <number>no. 255</number>
  <date>1711-12-22</date>
  <author>Joseph Addison</author>
  <quotation>Laudis amore tumes? sunt certa piacula, quae te</quotation>
  <quotation>Ter pure lecto poterunt recreare libello.---Hor.</quotation>
  <translation>Hor. Epistles, I. i. 36-37.</translation>
  <translation>Know there are rhymes, which (fresh and fresh apply'd)</translation>
  <translation>Will cure the arrant'st puppy of his pride.---Pope.</translation>
  </header>
<text>
<paragraph>THE Soul, considered abstractedly from its Passions, is
of a remiss and sedentary Nature, slow in its Resolves, and
languishing in its Executions. The Use therefore of the Passions is
to stir it up, and to put it upon Action, to awaken the
Understanding, to enforce the Will, and to make the whole Man more
vigorous and attentive in the Prosecutions of his Designs. As this
is the End of the Passions in general, so it is particularly of
Ambition, which pushes the Soul to such Actions as are apt to
procure Honour and Reputation to the Actor. But if we carry our
Reflections higher, we may discover further Ends of Providence in
implanting this Passion in Mankind.</paragraph>
<paragraph>It was necessary for the World,
that Arts should be invented and improved, Books written and
transmitted to Posterity, Nations conquered and civilized: Now
since the proper and genuine Motives to these and the like great
Actions, would only influence virtuous Minds; there would be but
small Improvements in the World, were there not some common
Principle of Action working equally with all Men. And such a
Principle is Ambition or a Desire of Fame, by which [great<footnote name="(1)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote255.xml"></footnote>]
Endowments are not suffered to lie idle and useless to the Publick,
and many vicious Men over-reached, as it were, and engaged contrary
to their natural Inclinations in a a glorious and laudable Course
of Action. For we may further observe, that Men of the greatest
Abilities are most fired with Ambition: And that on the contrary,
mean and narrow Minds are the least actuated by it: whether it be
that [a Man's Sense of his own<footnote name="(2)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote255.xml"></footnote>]
Incapacities makes [him<footnote name="(3)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote255.xml"></footnote>]
despair of coming at Fame, or that [he has<footnote name="(4)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote255.xml"></footnote>] not enough range of
Thought to look out for any Good which does not more immediately
relate to [his<footnote name="(5)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote255.xml"></footnote>]
Interest or Convenience, or that Providence, in
the very Frame of [his Soul<footnote name="(6)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote255.xml"></footnote>]
would not subject [him<footnote name="(7)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote255.xml"></footnote>] to such
a Passion as would be useless to the World, and a Torment to
[himself.<footnote name="(8)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote255.xml"></footnote>]</paragraph>
<paragraph>Were not this Desire of Fame very strong, the
Difficulty of obtaining it, and the Danger of losing it when
obtained, would be sufficient to deter a Man from so vain a
Pursuit.</paragraph>
<paragraph>How few are there who are furnished with Abilities
sufficient to recommend their Actions to the Admiration of the
World, and to distinguish themselves from the rest of Mankind?
Providence for the most part sets us upon a Level, and observes a
kind of Proportion in its Dispensation towards us. If it renders us
perfect in one Accomplishment, it generally leaves us defective in
another, and seems careful rather of preserving every Person from
being mean and deficient in his Qualifications, than of making any
single one eminent or extraordinary.</paragraph>
<paragraph>And among those who are the
most richly endowed by Nature, and accomplished by their own
Industry, how few are there whose Virtues are not obscured by the
Ignorance, Prejudice or Envy of their Beholders ? Some Men cannot
discern between a noble and a mean Action. Others are apt to
attribute them to some false End or Intention; and others purposely
misrepresent or put a wrong Interpretation on them.</paragraph>
<paragraph>But the more to enforce this Consideration, we may observe that those are
generally. most unsuccessful in their Pursuit after Fame, who are
most desirous of obtaining it. It is <italic>Salust's</italic> Remark upon <italic>Cato,</italic>
that the less he coveted Glory, the more he acquired it.<footnote name="(9)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote255.xml"></footnote></paragraph>
<paragraph>Men take an ill-natur'd Pleasure in crossing our Inclinations, and
disappointing us in what our Hearts are most set upon. When
therefore they have discovered the passionate Desire of Fame in the
Ambitious Man (as no Temper of Mind is more apt to show it self)
they become sparing and reserved in their Commendations, they envy
him the Satisfaction of an Applause, and look on their Praises
rather as a Kindness done to his Person, than as a Tribute paid to
his Merit. Others who are free from this natural Perverseness of
Temper grow wary in their Praises of one, who sets too great a
Value on them, lest they should raise him too high in his own
Imagination, and by Consequence remove him to a greater Distance
from themselves.</paragraph>
<paragraph>But further, this Desire of Fame naturally betrays
the ambitious Man into such Indecencies as are a lessening to his
Reputation. He is still afraid lest any of his Actions should be
thrown away in private, lest his Deserts should be concealed from
the Notice of the World, or receive any Disadvantage from the
Reports which others make of them. This often sets him on empty
Boasts and Ostentations of himself, and betrays him into vain
fantastick Recitals of his own Performances: His Discourse
generally leans one Way, and, whatever is the Subject of it, tends
obliquely either to the detracting from others, or to the extolling
of himself Vanity is the natural Weakness of an ambitious Man,
which exposes him to the secret Scorn and Derision of those he
converses with, and ruins the Character he is so industrious to
advance by it. For tho' his Actions are never so glorious, they
lose their Lustre when they are drawn at large, and set to show by
his own Hand; and as the World is more apt to find fault than to
commend, the Boast will probably be censured when the great Action
that occasioned it is forgotten.</paragraph>
<paragraph>Besides this very Desire of Fame
is looked on as a Meanness [and<footnote name="(10)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote255.xml"></footnote>] Imperfection in the greatest
Character. A solid and substantial Greatness of Soul looks down
with a generous Neglect on the Censures and Applauses of the
Multitude, and places a Man beyond the little Noise and Strife of
Tongues. Accordingly we find in our selves a secret Awe and
Veneration for the Character of one who moves above us in a regular
and illustrious Course of Virtue, without any regard to our good or
ill Opinions of him, to our Reproaches or Commendations. As on the
contrary it is usual for us, when we would take off from the Fame
and Reputation of an Action, to ascribe it to Vain-Glory, and a
Desire of Fame in the Actor. Nor is this common Judgment and
Opinion of Mankind ill-founded : for certainly it denotes no great
Bravery of Mind to be worked up to any noble Action by so selfish a
Motive, and to do that out of a Desire of Fame, which we could not
be prompted to by a disinterested Love to Mankind, or by a.
generous Passion for the Glory of him that made us.</paragraph>
<paragraph>Thus is Fame a thing difficult to be obtained by all, but particularly by those
who thirst after it, since most Men have so much either of
Ill-nature, or of Wariness, as not to gratify [or<footnote name="(11)" url="../december_footnotes/footnote255.xml"></footnote>]
sooth the Vanity of the Ambitious Man, and since this very Thirst after Fame
naturally betrays him into such In- decencies as are a lessening to
his Reputation, and is it self looked upon as a Weakness in the
greatest Characters.</paragraph>

<paragraph>In the next Place, Fame is easily lost, and as
difficult to be preserved as it was at first to be acquired. But
this I shall make the Subject of a following Paper.</paragraph>
<paragraph>C.</paragraph>

<paragraph>1. [all great]</paragraph>
<paragraph>2. [the Sense of their own]</paragraph>
<paragraph>3. [them]</paragraph>
<paragraph>4. [they have]</paragraph>
<paragraph>5. [their]</paragraph>
<paragraph>6. [their Souls]</paragraph>
<paragraph>7. [them]</paragraph>
<paragraph>8. [themselves]</paragraph>
<paragraph>9. Sallust. Bell. Catil. C. 49.</paragraph>
<paragraph>10. [and an]</paragraph>
<paragraph>11. [and]</paragraph>
</text>
</issue>
