14.2. 2. Of the Difference of Men in different Climates.
Cold air constringes the extremities of the external fibres of the body;
[1]
this
increases their elasticity, and favours the return of the blood from the
extreme parts to the heart. It contracts
[2]
those very fibres;
consequently it increases also their force. On the contrary, warm air
relaxes and lengthens the extremes of the fibres; of course it
diminishes their force and elasticity.
People are therefore more vigorous in cold climates. Here the action
of the heart and the reaction of the extremities of the fibres are
better performed, the temperature of the humours is greater, the blood
moves more freely towards the heart, and reciprocally the heart has more
power. This superiority of strength must produce various effects; for
instance, a greater boldness, that is, more courage; a greater sense of
superiority, that is, less desire of revenge; a greater opinion of
security, that is, more frankness, less suspicion, policy, and cunning.
In short, this must be productive of very different tempers. Put a man
into a close, warm place, and for the reasons above given he will feel a
great faintness. If under this circumstance you propose a bold
enterprise to him, I believe you will find him very little disposed
towards it; his present weakness will throw him into despondency; he
will be afraid of everything, being in a state of total incapacity. The
inhabitants of warm countries are, like old men, timorous; the people in
cold countries are, like young men, brave. If we reflect on the late
wars,
[3]
which are more recent in our memory, and in which we can better
distinguish some particular effects that escape us at a greater distance
of time, we shall find that the northern people, transplanted into
southern regions,
[4]
did not perform such exploits as their countrymen
who, fighting in their own climate, possessed their full vigour and
courage.
This strength of the fibres in northern nations is the cause that
the coarser juices are extracted from their aliments. Hence two things
result: one, that the parts of the chyle or lymph are more proper, by
reason of their large surface, to be applied to and to nourish the
fibres; the other, that they are less proper, from their coarseness, to
give a certain subtilty to the nervous juice. Those people have
therefore large bodies and but little vivacity.
The nerves that terminate from all parts in the cutis form each a
nervous bundle; generally speaking, the whole nerve is not moved, but a
very minute part. In warm climates, where the cutis is relaxed, the ends
of the nerves are expanded and laid open to the weakest action of the
smallest objects. In cold countries the cutis is constinged and the
papill compressed: the miliary glands are in some measure paralytic; and
the sensation does not reach the brain, except when it is very strong
and proceeds from the whole nerve at once. Now, imagination, taste,
sensibility, and vivacity depend on an infinite number of small
sensations.
I have observed the outermost part of a sheep's tongue, where, to
the naked eye, it seems covered with papill. On these papill I have
discerned through a microscope small hairs, or a kind of down; between
the papill were pyramids shaped towards the ends like pincers. Very
likely these pyramids are the principal organ of taste.
I caused the half of this tongue to be frozen, and, observing it
with the naked eye, I found the papill considerably diminished: even
some rows of them were sunk into their sheath. The outermost part I
examined with the microscope, and perceived no pyramids. In proportion
as the frost went off, the papill seemed to the naked eye to rise, and
with the microscope the miliary glands began to appear.
This observation confirms what I have been saying, that in cold
countries the nervous glands are less expanded: they sink deeper into
their sheaths, or they are sheltered from the action of external
objects; consequently they have not such lively sensations.
In cold countries they have very little sensibility tor pleasure; in
temperate countries, they have more; in warm countries, their
sensibility is exquisite. As climates are distinguished by degrees of
latitude, we might distinguish them also in some measure by those of
sensibility. I have been at the opera in England and in Italy, where I
have seen the same pieces and the same performers: and yet the same
music produces such different effects on the two nations: one is so cold
and phlegmatic, and the other so lively and enraptured, that it seems
almost inconceivable.
It is the same with regard to pain, which is excited by the
laceration of some fibre of the body. The Author of nature has made it
an established rule that this pain should be more acute in proportion as
the laceration is greater: now it is evident that the large bodies and
coarse fibres of the people of the north are less capable of laceration
than the delicate fibres of the inhabitants of warm countries;
consequently the soul is there less sensible of pain. You must flay a
Muscovite alive to make him feel.
From this delicacy of organs peculiar to warm climates it follows
that the soul is most sensibly moved by whatever relates to the union of
the two sexes: here everything leads to this object.
In northern climates scarcely has the animal part of love a power of
making itself felt. In temperate climates, love, attended by a thousand
appendages, endeavours to please by things that have at first the
appearance, though not the reality, of this passion. In warmer climates
it is liked for its own sake, it is the only cause of happiness, it is
life itself.
In southern countries a machine of a delicate frame but strong
sensibility resigns itself either to a love which rises and is
incessantly laid in a seraglio, or to a passion which leaves women in a
greater independence, and is consequently exposed to a thousand
inquietudes. In northern regions a machine robust and heavy finds
pleasure in whatever is apt to throw the spirits into motion, such as
hunting, travelling, war, and wine. If we travel towards the north, we
meet with people who have few vices, many virtues, and a great share of
frankness and sincerity. If we draw near the south, we fancy ourselves
entirely removed from the verge of morality; here the strongest passions
are productive of all manner of crimes, each man endeavouring, let the
means be what they will, to indulge his inordinate desires. In temperate
climates we find the inhabitants inconstant in their manners, as well as
in their vices and virtues: the climate has not a quality determinate
enough to fix them.
The heat of the climate may be so excessive as to deprive the body
of all vigour and strength. Then the faintness is communicated to the
mind; there is no curiosity, no enterprise, no generosity of sentiment;
the inclinations are all passive; indolence constitutes the utmost
happiness; scarcely any punishment is so severe as mental employment;
and slavery is more supportable than the force and vigour of mind
necessary for human conduct.
Footnotes
[1]
This appears even in the countenance: in cold weather people look
thinner.
[2]
We know that it shortens iron.
[3]
Those for the succession to the Spanish monarchy.
[4]
For instance, in Spain.