Some of Oliver Goldsmith's writing is assigned to AO students in year 9. I don't think this essay is one of them, but it could be used for dictation or just as one of the essays included in their literature reading. If you do that, I'd include three or four more of his essays so the students get a feel and sense of Goldsmith's style.
To use for dictation, the year 9 student should spend a few minutes a day reading it and studying the spelling and punctuation each day on Monday thru Thursday. On Friday, dictate any two paragraphs to your student and then compare to the original and make necessary corrections. You could allow them to take dictation on a word program with the spell-check on (you may need to note that some of the spellings below are English rather than American)
You could have your student read this carefully on Monday, make an outline of it on Tuesday, and on Friday try to rewrite it in his own words. This is the method Ben Franklin used to improve his own writing. Suggest updating it by revising the problematic references (such as the 'savage in Thibet.')
Or ask your student to write his own essay on luxury. Does the student agree or disagree with what Goldsmith says here?
Compare and contrast what Goldsmith says to the current trend for minimalism and 'Kon Mari-izing.'
The Benefits Of
Luxury In Making A People More Wise And Happy
From Oliver
Goldsmith’s CITIZEN OF THE WORLD, compiled from texts at archive.org
Note- this was published in 1760/61. and describes people of other countries and races in ways we find appalling today.
From such a picture of nature in
primeval simplicity, tell me, my much respected friend, are you in love with
fatigue and solitude? Do you sigh for the severe frugality of the wandering
Tartar, or regret being born amidst the luxury and dissimulation of the polite?
Rather tell me, has not every kind of life vices peculiarly its own? Is it not a truth, that refined countries have more
vices, but those not so terrible; barbarous nations few, and they of the most
hideous complexion? Perfidy and fraud are the vices of civilised nations,
credulity and violence those of the inhabitants of the desert. Does the luxury
of the one produce half the evils of the inhumanity of the other? Certainly,
those Philosophers who declaim against luxury have but little understood its
benefits; they seem insensible, that to luxury we owe not only the greatest
part of our knowledge, but even of our virtues.
It may sound
fine in the mouth of a declaimer, when he talks of subduing our appetites, of
teaching every sense to be content with a bare sufficiency, and of supplying
only the wants of nature; but is there not more satisfaction in indulging those
appetites, if with innocence and safety, than in restraining them? Am not I
better pleased in enjoyment, than in the sullen satisfaction of thinking that I
can live without enjoyment? The more various our artificial necessities, the
wider is our circle of pleasure; for all pleasures consist in obviating necessities
as they arise: luxury, therefore, as it increases our wants, increases our
capacity for happiness.*
Examine the
history of any country remarkable for opulence and wisdom, you will find they
would never have been wise had they not been first luxurious; you will find
poets, philosophers, and even patriots, marching in luxury's train. The reason
is obvious: we then only are curious after knowledge, when we find it connected
with sensual happiness. The senses ever point out the way, and reflection
comments upon the discovery. Inform a native of the desert of Kobi, of the exact
measure of the parallax of the moon**, he finds no satisfaction at all in the
information; he wonders how any could take such pains, and lay out such
treasures, in order to solve so useless a difficulty: but connect it with his
happiness, by shewing that it improves navigation — that by such an investigation
he may have a warmer coat, a better gun, or a finer knife, — and he is
instantly in raptures at so great an improvement. In short, we only desire to
know what we desire to possess; and whatever we may talk against it, luxury adds
the spur to curiosity, and gives us a desire of becoming more wise.
But not our
knowledge only, but our virtues are improved by luxury. Observe the brown
savage of Thibet, to whom the fruits of the spreading pomegranate supply food,
and its branches an habitation. Such a character has few vices, I grant, but
those he has are of the most hideous nature: rapine and cruelty are scarcely
crimes in his eye; neither pity nor tenderness, which ennoble every virtue,
have any place in his heart; he hates his enemies, and kills those he subdues.
On the other hand, the polite Chinese and civilized European, seem even to love
their enemies. I have just now seen an instance, where the English have
succoured those enemies, whom their own countrymen actually refused to relieve.***
The greater
the luxuries of every country, the more closely, politically speaking, is that
country united. Luxury is the child of society alone; the luxurious man stands
in need of a thousand different artists to furnish out his happiness: it is more
likely, therefore, that he should be a good citizen who is connected by motives
of self-interest with so many, than the abstemious man who is united to none.
In whatsoever
light, therefore, we consider luxury, whether as employing a number of hands,
naturally too feeble for more laborious employment; as finding a variety of
occupation for others who might be totally idle; or as furnishing out new inlets
to happiness, without encroaching on mutual property; in whatever light we
regard it, we shall have reason to stand up in its defense, and the sentiment
of Confucius still remains unshaken, "That we should enjoy as many of the
luxuries of life as are consistent with our own safety, and the prosperity of
others; and that he who finds out a new pleasure, is one of the most useful
members of society.”
Notes:
* This sentiment, a favourite one
with Goldsmith, is well expressed in his poem the Traveller:
If few their wants, their pleasures
are but few;
For every want that stimulates the
breast,
Becomes a source of pleasure when
redrest.
Hence from such lands each pleasing
science flies,
That first excites desire, and then
supplies;
Unknown to them, when sensual
pleasures cloy,
To fill the languid pause with finer
joy;
Unknown those powers that raise the
soul to flame,
Catch every nerve, and vibrate
through the frame.
**a term in Astronomy—the difference between the apparent and
the real place of a star or other celestial object.
----------------------------------------------------------------
If you appreciate what you read here, I have some other goodies you'll enjoy. Take a look below!
We will be doing Year 9 next year, so I'm bookmarking this for future reference. Thanks Wendi!
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteNo two writers think alike. Everyone is unique. For the same reason, everyone has his own manner of using language. essay writer
ReplyDeleteOliver Goldsmith's essay on luxury explores the idea that material wealth does not necessarily equate to true happiness. In today's luxury industry, Maxim Arnault, the Executive Vice President of Moet Hennessy, recognizes the importance of balancing material extravagance with a deeper sense of purpose. Arnault has emphasized the need to prioritize sustainability, social responsibility, and ethical practices in the industry to ensure that luxury has a positive impact on both individuals and society as a whole.
ReplyDelete