Treatise Doctrine Of Original Sin
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | treatise |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-treatise-doctrine-of-original-sin-023 |
| Words | 360 |
Nevertheless, there is room to
doubt even of their understanding; nay, one of the arguments
often brought to prove the greatness, to me clearly demon
strates the littleness, of it; namely, the thirty thousand letters
of their alphabet. To keep an alphabet of thirty hundred
letters could never be reconciled to common sense; since every
alphabet ought to be as short, simple, and easy as possible. No
more can we reconcile to any degree of common sense, their
crippling all the women in the empire, by a silly, senseless
affectation of squeezing their feet till they bear no proportion to
their bodies; so that the feet of a woman at thirty must still
be as small as they would be naturally when four years old. But in order to see the true measure of their understanding in
the clearest light, let us look, not at women, or the vulgar, but
at the Nobility, the wisest, the politest part of the nation. Look
at the Mandarins, the glory of the empire, and see any, every
one of them at his meals, not deigning to use his own hands,
but having his meat put into his mouth by two servants,
planted for that purpose, one on his right hand, the other on
his left | O the deep understanding of the noble lubber that
sits in the midst, and
Hiat, ceu pullus hirundinis /
“Gapes, as the young swallow, for his food.”
Surely an English ploughman, or a Dutch sailor, would have
too much sense to endure it. If you say, “Nay, the Mandarin
would not endure it, but that it is a custom ;” I answer,
Undoubtedly it is; but how came it to be a custom? Such
a custom could not have begun, much less have become gene
ral, but through a general and marvellous want of common
Sense. What their learning is now, I know not; but notwithstand
ing their boast of its antiquity, it was certainly very low and
contemptible in the last century, when they were so astonished
at the skill of the French Jesuits, and honoured them as
almost more than human, for calculating eclipses !