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       Johann Georg Zimmermann

      Solitude

      With the Life of the Author. In Two Parts

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664605511

       PREFACE.

       LIFE OF ZIMMERMAN.

       SOLITUDE; OR THE INFLUENCE OF OCCASIONAL RETIREMENT UPON THE MIND AND HEART.

       CHAPTER I. Introduction.

       CHAPTER II. The influence of solitude upon the mind.

       CHAPTER III. Influence of Solitude upon the Heart.

       CHAPTER IV. The General Advantages of Retirement.

       CHAPTER V. Advantages of solitude in exile.

       CHAPTER VI. Advantages of solitude in old age; and on the bed of death.

       SOLITUDE. PART II. THE PERNICIOUS INFLUENCE OF A TOTAL SECLUSION FROM SOCIETY UPON THE MIND AND THE HEART.

       CHAPTER I. Introduction.

       CHAPTER II. Of the motives to solitude.

       CHAPTER III. The disadvantages of solitude.

       CHAPTER IV. The influence of solitude on the imagination.

       CHAPTER V. The effects of solitude on a melancholy mind.

       CHAPTER VI. The influence of solitude on the passions.

       CHAPTER VII. Of the danger of idleness in solitude.

       CHAPTER VIII. Conclusion.

       Table of Contents

      Weak and delicate minds may, perhaps, be alarmed by the title of this work. The word solitude, may possibly engender melancholy ideas; but they have only to read a few pages to be undeceived. The author is not one of those extravagant misanthropists who expect that men, formed by nature for the enjoyments of society, and impelled continually towards it by a multitude of powerful and invincible propensities, should seek refuge in forests, and inhabit the dreary cave or lonely cell; he is a friend to the species, a rational philosopher, and the virtuous citizen, who, encouraged by the esteem of his sovereign, endeavors to enlighten the minds of his fellow creatures upon a subject of infinite importance to them, the attainment of true felicity.

      No writer appears more completely convinced than M. Zimmerman, that man is born for society, or feels its duties with more refined sensibility.

      It is the nature of human society, and its correspondent duties, which he here undertakes to examine. The important characters of father, husband, son, and citizen, impose on man a variety of obligations, which are always dear to virtuous minds, and establish between him, his country, his family, and his friends, relations too necessary and attractive to be disregarded.

      “What wonder, therefore, since th’ endearing ties

      Of passion link the universal kind

      Of man so close; what wonder if to search

      This common nature through the various change

      Of sex, of age, and fortune, and the frame

      Of each peculiar, draw the busy mind

      With unresisted charms? The spacious west,

      And all the teeming regions of the south,

      Hold not a quarry to the curious flight,

      Of knowledge half so tempting or so fair,

      As man to man.”

      But it is not amidst tumultuous joys and noisy pleasures; in the chimeras of ambition, or the illusions of self-love; in the indulgence of feeling, or the gratification of desire, that men must expect to feel the charms of those mutual ties which link them so firmly to society. It is not in such enjoyments that men can feel the dignity of those duties, the performance of which nature has rendered productive of so many pleasures, or hope to taste that true felicity which results from an independent mind and a contented heart: a felicity seldom sought after, only because it is so little known, but which every individual may find within his own bosom. Who, alas! does not constantly experience the necessity of entering into that sacred asylum to search for consolation under the real or imaginary misfortunes of life, or to alleviate indeed more frequently the fatigue of its painful pleasures? Yes, all men, from the mercenary trader, who sinks under the anxiety of his daily task, to the proud statesman, intoxicated by the incense of popular applause, experience the desire of terminating their arduous career. Every bosom feels an anxiety for repose, and fondly wishes to steal from the vortex of a busy and perturbed life, to enjoy the tranquillity of solitude.

      “Hackney’d in business, wearied at that oar

      Which thousands, once chain’d fast to, quit no more,

      But which, when life at ebb, runs weak and low,

      All wish, or seem to wish, they could forego;

      The statesman, lawyer, merchant, man of trade,

      Pant for the refuge of a peaceful shade

      Where all his long anxieties forgot,

      Amidst the charms of a sequester’d spot,

      Or recollected only to gild o’er

      And add a smile to what was sweet before,

      He may possess the joys he thinks he sees,

      Lay his old age upon the lap of ease,

      Improve the remnant of his wasted span,

      And having liv’d a trifler, die a man.”

      It is under the peaceful shades of solitude that the mind regenerates and acquires fresh force; it is there alone that the happy can enjoy the fulness of felicity, or the miserable

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