REMEMBERING FRANCIS BACON
P. V. Laxmi Prasad
Next to
Shakespeare, Bacon was a familiar name to reckon with in the 16th
century English Literature and, still, he carries that name in every household
connected with literature. He is the
greatest prose writer par excellence and a model essayist for others to emulate
his writings. He is today remembered
for his essays which are, undoubtedly, true spices of human life. A living writer in the hearts of millions of
readers, Bacon is read across the globe by a diverse section of society i.e.
from literate to literati. He is highly praised in glorious terms not only by
his readers but also by his critics. As
a trend setter, his essays address the core issues of human life ranging from
the elementary to the serious, and from the sensitive to the critical. They represent side by side an amalgamation
of humanistic concerns and the eternity of Bacon’s contribution to literature. Bacon was a reflection of what he had
written in them. He is topical, social,
fully relevant and a distinct reality reflecting our times in a fitting manner.
Bacon’s
essays are treatises for they deal in detail with a single subject. They concentrate on a specific topic.
Subject, for Bacon, is an important aspect of writing. He hardly deviates from subject midway
through the essay. They vary from
individual to institution, from child to parent, from philosopher to common
man, from ruler to traitor, from Judge to suitor. His subject matter refreshes always with a new form i.e.
quotations, illustrations and allusions.
Each of his master-pieces originates a rich supply of ideas. He uses profound thoughts to effectively
convey his preachings. Precision and
accuracy are his chief forte. Unlike
Charles Lamb, Bacon is impersonal, i.e. he writes about others and writes for
the common good of people.
The
quintessential features of his writing are: shortness of titles, accurate
diction, brilliant conceits, epigrammatic style, paradoxical and didactic
statements and antitheses. Bacon is at
times individual, representative, intellectual and still at others,
philosophical, moral and judicious. He
lays down moral principles to lead a virtuous, decent and dignified life. As Latin was the language of the day, he uses
it to perfection with the help of Biblical allusions and Italian Phrases. His quotations are fully relevant to
contemporary society. They are, in
general, used as “quotable quotes” in schools and colleges. Every piece of his writing symbolizes artistic
beauty and perfect craftsmanship. In short, they are doctrines and discourses
about common interest of human life.
There is a
touch of beauty, artistic perfection, and practical wisdom that is evident in a
few of the following moral, philosophical & intellectual prescriptions.
1. Bacon’s discrimination between bad
husbands & good wives is fully relevant to the contemporary institution of
marriage where parents of a bride look for moral qualities in a groom. Sometimes, their study of a suitable groom goes
wrong. As a result their daughters get
bad husbands. Ironically, these bad
husbands get from good to very good counterparts. They command respect, loyalty and even appreciation from
them. This is truly applicable in
context of Indian society. “It is often seen that bad husbands have very good
wives” (of Marriage & Single Life).
2. Bacon rightly comments on the role
of a woman who plays different parts in her married life with the
counterpart. This is fully reflected in
his farsightedness when he said: “Wives are young men’s mistresses, companions
for middle ages and old men’s nurses” (of Marriage & Single Life).
Bacon
means that men marry whenever they want to.
But a woman who marries him has to serve at every stage of his life in
different capacities. The capacity of a
woman serving man in these stages is clearly brought out.
3. Exposing the vices of authority,
Bacon rightly explains them when he said: “the vices of authority are chiefly
four: delays, corruption, roughness and facility” (of Great place). The
authorities enjoy a higher position and status than that of a common man. But red tapism by bureaucrats leads
eventually to uneven delays, high-level corruption, roughness of handling the
work. These are fully relevant to
Indian administrative system where these vices are largely at work. The common man is usually the victim of
these vices. Bacon asks the people in
higher positions to avoid these vices.
4. Bacon refers to the purpose and
benefit of friendship when he said in one of his essays on (of
Friendship). “A principal fruit of
friendship is the ease & discharge of the fullness and swellings of the
heart”. One of the important benefits
of friendship is to exchange freely and openly the feelings, and the emotions
with each other. A man will get
relieved when he does so with his friend.
He can share his thoughts with a sense of freedom and open mind with
him. But contrary to what Bacon said,
friendship today loses its significance it is merely for fun and enjoyment.
5. “Reading maketh a full man:
conference a ready man;
& writing an exact man”
(of
studies) Bacon shows us how reading influences the personality of (of studies)
Bacon shows us how reading influences the personality of a man. A man, Bacon
writes, will be quick, alert, exact, precise, thoughtful, wise, and
intelligible and acknowledgeable upon the reading of books. It makes him/her rise to the occasion and
respond to the urgencies of life. These
are the three pillars on which the edifice of communication stands.
6. “Revenge is a kind of wild
Justice” (of Revenge)
Bacon refers to the principle of
revenge in human beings. He said that man’s nature in taking revenge against
some one who does some wrong/injury is something cruel, barbaric and
unjustified. It is an act of
injustice. In other words, revenge
means taking into one’s hands the entire judicial system. Bacon lays stress on the point of legal
justice rather than illegal justice.
This is truly applicable to the contemporary world where revenge plays a
major role in dividing people.
7. Next, Bacon shows us the
difference in the degree of affection of parents towards their children. He calls it to be unequal & sometimes
unworthy especially in the case of a mother who brings up her children in their
development. “A wise son rejoiceth the
father, but an ungracious son shames the mother (of parents and children).
Bacon strongly condemns this partisan
attitude on the part of the mother who milks, nourishes and nurtures her
children affectionately.
8. Advising and cautioning the
youngsters on different sides of love, Bacon rightly said that nuptial love
makes a couple bind together so long as they live. They are eternally united in their conjugal love. But, love of friends continues to be a
subject of romantic interest. It merely
influences the on-lookers. It is short
lived and does not last longer. Finally
love that is rejected, polluted and negated, destroys the true spirit of love
and results in the mockery of love.
“Nuptial love maketh man kind, friendly love perfecteth it, but wanton
love corrupteth and embaseth it (of love).
9. Bacon projects his thoughts on the
moral side of the world in one of his essays
(of Goodness)
“This
(Goodness) of all virtues and dignities of the mind, is the greatest, being the
character of the Deity, and with out it, man is a busy, mischievous, wretched
thing, no better than a kind of vermin”.
He
is right in preaching that goodness exists as a normal and fundamental
character of the deity. Man becomes a
busy mischievous and wretched thing when he lacks in goodness. As a moral principle, the deity is no
exception to this virtue. He stresses
the point of inculcating a moral virtue like goodness.
10. Writing about envy among human
beings, Bacon said:
“For
envy is a gadding passion, and walketh the streets, and doth not keep home”.
Envy wanders from place to place
searching the lives of people on the streets and sowing the seeds of it upon
human beings. It leaves behind people a
subject matter to fight among themselves.
It does not live at home. It
stays at an inn.
Lastly, Bacon
is no barrier to age, colour, creed, sex and religion. He is a thorough human being to the
core. He is read irrespective of the
continent, the country and the society that is from the rulers to the ruled,
from autocracy to democracy, from ethnic race to multiple races, from the
richest to the poorest. Above all, his
works are naked truths of life in totality.
They free human minds from innocence, ignorance and immaturity. They are highly critical, didactic,
judicious and logical. They contain
absolute knowledge and practical wisdom.
His works receive worldwide recognition, appreciation and readership
largest ever than expectations. In
short, Bacon is a citizen both of continental and cosmopolitan society. No literary household in the world is
complete without a book of Bacon on the shelf.