Bütün bu bitki inceleme gezilerim, dikkatimi çeken şeylerin bulunduğu yeren aldığım türlü izlenimler ve yol açtığı düşünceler, bunlara karışan olayla… - Jean-Jacques Rousseau

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Bütün bu bitki inceleme gezilerim, dikkatimi çeken şeylerin bulunduğu yeren aldığım türlü izlenimler ve yol açtığı düşünceler, bunlara karışan olayların tümü, bende aynı yerlerde toplanan otlarla karşılaşıca tazelenen duygular bıraktı. Yüreğime, her zaman duygululuk veren o güzel görünümleri, ormanları, gölleri, korulukları, kayaları, dağları, bir daha göremeyeceğim; ancak, kendimi yeniden orada düşünmek için ot ve kök koleksiyonumu açmak yeter. Bu benim için bir tür anı defteridir.
Beni bitkibilime bağlayan, dolaylı düşünceler zinciridir ki imgelemime onun en çok hoşlandığı düşünceleri toplayarak anımsatır: çayırlar, sular, ormanlar ve bütün bunların içinde bulunabilinen yalnızlık, sessizlik ve hele erinci belleğimde hep canlandırmaktır. Böylece, insanların bana yönelmiş kıyıcılığını, onlardan gördüğüm nefreti, düşmanlığı, kötü davranışları; kendilerine gösterdiğim sevginin ve içten bağların karşılığı olarak yaptıkları kötülükleri unutturuyor, beni eskiden birlikte yaşadığım insanlar gibi iyi ve sıradan insanlara, sessiz evlere bir kez daha, götürür gibi oluyor, bundan duyduğum hazzı tazeleyerek bir ölümlünün duyabileceği en kötü talihin içinde bile, hala mutlu ediyor.

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About Jean-Jacques Rousseau

Jean-Jacques Rousseau (June 28, 1712 – July 2, 1778) was a major French-speaking Genevan philosopher of Enlightenment whose political ideas influenced the French Revolution, the development of socialist theory, and the growth of nationalism.

Biography information from Wikiquote

Also Known As

Alternative Names: Citizen of Geneva Jean Jacques Rousseau J. J. Rousseau Rousseau J.J. Rousseau JJ Rousseau
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Additional quotes by Jean-Jacques Rousseau

In giving too much weight to prudence one doesn’t make enough allowance for the possibility of good luck.

If it is good to know how to deal with men as they are, it is much better to make them what there is need that they should be. The most absolute authority is that which penetrates into a man's inmost being, and concerns itself no less with his will than with his actions. It is certain that all peoples become in the long run what the government makes them; warriors, citizens, men, when it so pleases: or merely populace and rabble, when it chooses to make them so. Hence every prince who despises his subjects, dishonours himself, in confessing that he does not know how to make them worthy of respect. Make men, therefore, if you would command men: if you would have them obedient to the laws, make them love the laws, and then they will need only to know what is their duty to do it. This was the great art of ancient governments, in those distant times when philosophers gave laws to men, and made use of their authority only to render them wise and happy. Thence arose the numerous sumptuary laws, the many regulations of morals, and all the public rules of conduct which were admitted or rejected with the greatest care. Even tyrants did not forget this important part of administration, but took as great pains to corrupt the morals of their slaves, as Magistrates took to correct those of their fellowcitizens. But our modern governments, which imagine they have done everything when they have raised money, conceive that it is unnecessary and even impossible to go a step further.

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