CHAPTER XL
Every kind of love and every kind of imagination, in the individual, takes its colour from one of these six temperaments:—
- The sanguine, or French,—M. de Francueil (Memoirs of Madame d'Épinay);
- The choleric, or Spanish,—Lauzun (the Peguilhen of Saint-Simon's Memoirs);
- The melancholy, or German,—Schiller's Don Carlos;
- The phlegmatic, or Dutch;
- The nervous—Voltaire;
- The athletic—Milo of Croton.[1]
If the influence of temperament makes itself felt in ambition, avarice, friendship, etc. etc., what must it be in the case of love, in which the physical also is perforce an ingredient? Let us suppose that all kinds of love can be referred to the four varieties, which we have noted:—
- Passion-love—Julie d'Étanges;[(23)]
- Gallant-love or gallantry;
- Physical love;
- Vanity-love—"a duchess is never more than thirty for a bourgeois."
We must submit these four kinds of love to the six different characters, with which habits, dependent upon the six kinds of temperament, stamp the imagination. Tiberius did not have the wild imagination of Henry VIII.
Then let us submit all these combinations, thus obtained, to the differences of habit which depend upon government or national character:—
- Asiatic despotism, such as may be seen at Constantinople;
- Absolute monarchy à la Louis XIV;
- Aristocracy masked by a charter, or government of a nation for the profit of the rich, as in England—all according to the rules of a self-styled biblical morality;
- A federal republic, or government for the profit of all, as in the United States of America;
- Constitutional monarchy, or—
- A State in revolution, as Spain, Portugal, France[(24)].
This state of things in a country gives lively
passions to everyone, makes manners more natural,
destroys puerilities, the conventional virtues and senseless
proprieties[2]—gives seriousness to youth and causes it to
despise vanity-love and neglect gallantry.
This state can last a long time and form the habits of a generation. In France it began in 1788, was interrupted in 1802, and began again in 1818—to end God knows when!
After all these general ways of considering love, we have the differences of age, and come finally to individual peculiarities.
For example, we might say:—