Elinor, Elinor, they who suffer little may be proud and independent as they like - may resist insult, or return mortification - but I cannot. I must feel - I must be wretched - and they are welcome to enjoy the consciousness of it that can.
It lies in giving. One should give what one can relinquish or the abundance that makes one suffer. Otherwise one gives according to the principle of the do ut des.The joy I have intentionally given to the other obliges the other to provide a gift in return. Your own overflowing joy never obliges the other.
(İşin özü, vermektir. Kişi, vazgeçebileceği şeyi ya da kendisine acı veren fazlalığı vermelidir. Aksi takdirde, “do ut des” ilkesine göre vermiş olur. Karşı tarafa kasıtlı olarak verdiğim sevinç, onu karşılığında bir hediye vermeye mecbur kılar. Kendi içinden taşan sevgin ise karşı tarafı asla mecbur kılmaz.)
Sayfa 645 - Book: 5 .... "do ut des” (vermen için veriyorum.)·Kitabı okuyor
Liberals initially welcomed Pope Pius IX (1846–78). He was a warm, kindly, well-meaning man, and the liberals took him for a true reformer. Some dreamed of an Italian federation under the pope. But Pius suddenly changed his mind about the Papal States when revolutionaries assassinated the first papal prime minister, Count Pellegrino Rossi. Revolution broke out in Rome, and Pius was forced to flee. With French military help, he regained Rome and the Papal States, but this time Pius insisted on a return to the old absolutist rule.
Fakirleşen köylüler şehre gelerek seçimlerde oylarını çok para verenlere satıyor ve böylece bunlar istikrarsız ve her çeşit siyasi ihtilal'e hazır proletarya'yı meydana getiriyorlardı.
The most aggressive opposition to the Jesuits came from a movement called Jansenism. Cornelius Jansen (1585–1638) was a Dutchman who had adopted St. Augustine’s views of sin and grace at the University of Louvain. He came to believe that the best way to defend Catholicism against the Calvinist challenge was to return to the doctrines of the great North African and establish a rigorous moral code for the Catholic clergy to combat the easygoing ethics of the Jesuits.