University of Oregon monthly. (Eugene, Oregon) 1897-????, March 01, 1908, Image 12

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    UNIVERSITY OF OREGON MONTHLY
Ridicule as a Moral W eapon
i'S-S-^
15
*
*
REÆT achievements;, have been | wrought in this
• -world Ig-j^ one- kind <<5f^tmoveinent and another,
f -S'ometime&^a War, w ith a/wonderful leader at "its
head • is - necessary Jo effect the upheaval ; some­
times
is the- strenuous\work of such a man as
Luther
of -a little bandnof men. - Often, parlia“ •
"" ments and;. eouncife; aie convinced and brought to
aUtïOÙ ;by the-^elling argument»,¿f spm-e ¿member, a statesm an whose
name, goes, down in the hièWry of his nation as-one of the Great
Ajl->hve§êra-rç momentous influences/they have effected great.things
int the.‘past and undoubtedly-will in future, but there is.one- world
weapon which L have mot .mentioned,-a weapon more , subtle,, more
pêw^ffnl -in its sway than any -dithe others ; and that U/the weapon
of ridicule.
.;H© ’m atter-in what - age y o u , take 'i f n o matter., whether it-is*,
it» the-life of some one person/, o r in-that of a whole community, I
st,at#.4r" ëvea nation, ridicule/ is always. a compelling -forces./' In­
stinctively we shrink from being laughed at.6 j Perhaps^-we have
beèrî ^argued with, .the subject" Of discussion has been ¿-gone over
thoroughly but-w è blindly persist in our coupé#;?perhaps our friends
have pleàd with us, used the utmost powers of persuasion, yet stub­
bornly we refuse to be moved ; but let even a hint pL;iidieUle come
tô'ô-uf- ears, and an uneasy feeling of ■ g u ilt, creeps »lover , us,.1 we
turn this Way and that and finding no means of escape we quietly,
halil self-apologetically, begin to mend our ways. Such is/hum an
nature that even pleasant laughter is barely endured, much, less
that which carries with it the sting of sarcasm.
W hat is true of the individual iy tru e of the class and so we
find one of the great weapons-.^ history has been ridicule. Voltaire
lived in an age of fermentation ; the principles, the rule, the religion
of the Middle Ages were becoming irksome to modern France ;
buff there had aé yet -been-no agitation of any strength. Men were
afraid to say what they thought; the new knowledge or awakening
interest in new knowledge, was as yet suppressed when Voltaire
arose/and became the center of the uprising against old customs,