has it come to pass that men of
genius,
talent, and virtue
withal, have been gamesters?
Men of
genius, `gifted men,' as they are called, are much to be
pitied. One of them has said--`Oh! if my pillow could reveal my
sufferings last night!' His was true grief--for it had no
witness.[105] The endowments of this nature of ours are so
strangely mixed--the events of our lives are so unexpectedly
ruled, that one might almost prefer to have been fashioned after
those
imaginary beings who act so _CONSISTENTLY_ in the nursery
tales and other figments. Most men seem to have a double soul;
and in your men of
genius--your celebrities--the battle between
the two seems like the
tremendousconflict so grandly (and
horribly) described by Milton. Who loved his country more than
Cato? Who cared more for his country's honour? And yet Cato was
not only
unable to
resist the soft impeachments of alcohol--
Narratur et prisci Catonis
Saepe mero caluisse virtus--
but he was also a dice-player, a
gambler" target="_blank" title="n.赌徒">
gambler.[106]
[105] Ille dolet vere qui sine teste dolet. Martial, lib. I.
[106] Plutarch, _Cato._
Julius Caesar did not drink; but what a profligate he was! And
I have no doubt that he was a
gambler" target="_blank" title="n.赌徒">
gambler: it is certain that he got
rid of millions nobody knew how.
I believe, however, that the following is an undeniable fact.
You may find
suspicious gamesters in every rank of life, but
among men of
genius you will generally, if not always, find only
victims resigned to the caprices of fortune. The
professions which imply the greatest
enthusiasm naturally
furnish the greater number of gamesters. Thus, perhaps, we may
name ten poet-gamesters to one savant or
philosopher who deserved
the title or infamy.
Coquillart, a poet of the 15th century, famous for his satirical
verses against women, died of grief after having ruined himself
by gaming. The great
painter Guido--and a
painter is certainly a
poet--was another example. By nature gentle and
honourable, he
might have been the most
fortunate of men if the demon of
gambling had not poisoned his
existence, the end of which was
truly
wretched.
Rotrou, the acknowledged master of Corneille,
hurried his
poetical effusions in order to raise money for gambling. This
man of
genius was but a spoilt child in the matter of play. He
once received two or three hundred _louis_, and mistrusting
himself, went and hid them under some vine-branches, in order not
to
gamble all away at once. Vain precaution! On the following
night his bag was empty.
The poet Voiture was the delight of his contemporaries,
conspicuous as he was for the most
exquisitepolish and
inexhaustible wit; but he was also one of the most desperate
gamesters of his time. Like Rotrou, he mistrusted his folly, and
sometimes refrained. `I have discovered,' he once wrote to a
friend, `as well as Aristotle, that there is no beatitude in
play; and in fact I have given over gambling; it is now seven
months since I played--which is very important news, and which I
forgot to tell you.' He would have died rich had he always
refrained. His relapses were terrible; one night he lost fifteen
hundred pistoles (about L750).
The list of foreign poets ruined by gambling might be extended;
whilst, on the other hand, it is impossible, I believe, to quote
a single
instance of the kind among the poets of England,--
perhaps because very few of them had anything to lose. The
reader will probably remember Dr Johnson's
exclamation on hearing
of the large debt left unpaid by poor Goldsmith at his death--
`Was ever poet so trusted before!' . . .
The great
philosophers Montaigne and Descartes, seduced at an
early age by the allurements of gambling, managed at length to
overcome the evil, presenting examples of reformation--which
proves that this mania is not
absolutely incurable.
Descartes became a gamester in his seventeenth year; but it is
said that the combinations of cards, or the
doctrine of
probabilities, interested him more than his winnings.[107]
[107] Hist. des Philos. Modernes: _Descartes_.
The
celebrated Cardan, one of the most
universal and most
eccentricgeniuses of his age, declares in his autobiography,
that the rage for gambling long entailed upon him the loss of
reputation and fortune, and that it retarded his progress in the
sciences. `Nothing,' says he, `could justify me, unless it was
that my love of gaming was less than my
horror of privation.' A
very bad excuse, indeed; but Cardan reformed and ceased to be a
gambler" target="_blank" title="n.赌徒">
gambler.
Three of the greatest
geniuses of England--Lords Halifax,
Anglesey, and Shaftesbury--were
gambler" target="_blank" title="n.赌徒">
gamblers; and Locke tells a very
funny story about one of their gambling bouts. This
philosopher,
who neglected nothing, however
eccentric, that had any relation
to the
working of the human understanding, happened to be present
while my Lords Halifax, Anglesey, and Shaftesbury were playing,
and had the
patience to write down, word for word, all their
discordant utterances during the phases of the game; the result
being a dialogue of speakers who only used
exclamations--all
talking in
chorus, but more to themselves than to each other.
Lord Anglesey observing Locke's
occupation, asked him what he was
writing. `My Lord,' replied Locke, `I am
anxious not to lose
anything you utter.' This irony made them all blush, and put an
end to the game.
M. Sallo, Counsellor to the Parliament of Paris, died, says
Vigneul de Marville, of a disease to which the children of the
Muses are
rarely subject, and for which we find no
remedy in
Hippocrates and Galen;--he died of a lingering disease after
having lost 100,000 crowns at the gaming table--all he possessed.
By way of
diversion to his cankering grief, he started the well-
known _Journal des Savans_, but lived to write only 13 sheets of
it, for he was wounded to the death.[108]
[108] Melanges, d'Hist. et de Litt. i.
The
physician Paschasius Justus was a
deplorableinstance of an
incorrigible
gambler" target="_blank" title="n.赌徒">
gambler. This
otherwise most excellent and learned
man having passed three-fourths of his life in a continual
struggle with vice, at length
resolved to cure himself of
the disease by occupying his mind with a work which might be
useful to his contemporaries and posterity.[109] He began his
book, but still he gamed; he finished it, but the evil was still
in him. `I have lost everything but God!' he exclaimed. He
prayed for
delivery from his soul's disease;[110] but his prayer
was not heard; he died like any
gambler" target="_blank" title="n.赌徒">
gambler--more
wretched than
reformed.
[109] `De Alea, sive de curanda in pecuniam cupiditate,' pub. in
1560.
[110] Illum animi morbum, ut Deus tolleret, serio et
frequenter optavit.
M. Dusaulx, author of a work on Gaming, exclaims therein--`I have
gambled like you, Paschasius, perhaps with greater fury. Like
you I write against gaming. Can I say that I am stronger than
you, in more
critical circumstances?'[111]
[111] La Passion du Jeu.
What, then, is that mania which can be
overcome neither by the
love of glory nor the study of wisdom!
The
literary men of Greece and Rome
rarely played any games but
those of skill, such as
tennis, backgammon, and chess; and even
in these it was considered `indecent' to appear too skilful.
Cicero stigmatizes two of his contemporaries for
taking too
great a delight in such games, on
account of their skill in
playing them.[112]
[112] Ast alii, quia praeclare faciunt, vehementius quam causa