62MONTESQUIEU AND IIIS SYSTEM.
duration. The tempered darkness of winter continues as long as the dubious and melancholy summer light.
I cannot yet cease from admiring the phenomenon of a polar night, whose clear beam almost equals that of the day. Nothing more interests me than the different degrees in wliich light is distributed to the various portions of the globe. At the end of the year, all the opposite parts of the earth have beheld the same sun diu`ing an equal number of hours; but what a difference between the days ! what a· diversity also of temperature and of hues ! The sun, whose rays strike vertically upon the earth, and the sun whose beams fall obliquely, does not appear the same luminary, at least if we judge by effects.
As for myself, whose existence bears a sympathetic analogy to that of plants, I acknowledge a kind of fatality in climates, and, impelled by the influence the heavens have over my mind, willingly pay respect to the theory of Montesquieu. To such a degree are my temper and faculties subject to the action of the atmosphere, that I cannot doubt of its effects upon politics. But the genius of Montesquieu has exaggerated and carried too far the consequences of this belief. Obstinacy of opinion is the rock on which genius has too often made shipwreck. Powerful minds will only see what they wish to see : the world is within themselves ; they understand every thing but that which is told to them.
About an hour ago I beheld the sun sinking in the ocean between the N.N.AY. and N. He has left behind a long bright track which continues to light me at this midnight hour, and enables me to write upon