Edmund Burke (1729–1797). On the Sublime and Beautiful.
The Harvard Classics. 1909–14.
Darkness Terrible in its Own Nature
PERHAPS it may appear on inquiry that blackness and darkness are in some degree
painful by their natural operation, independent of any associations whatsoever.
I must observe, that the ideas of darkness and blackness are much the same; and
they differ only in this, that blackness is a more confined idea. Mr. Cheselden
has given us a very curious story of a boy, who had been born blind, and continued
so until he was thirteen or fourteen years old; he was then couched for a cataract,
by which operation he received his sight. Among many remarkable particulars that
attended his first perceptions and judgments on visual objects, it gave him great
uneasiness; and that some time after, upon accidentally seeing a negro woman,
he was struck with great horror at the sight. The horror, in this case, can scarcely
be supposed to arise from any association. The boy appears by the account to have
been particularly observing and sensible for one of his age; and therefore it
is probable, if the great uneasiness he felt at the first sight of black had arisen
from its connexion with any other disagreeable ideas, he would have observed and
mentioned it. For an idea, disagreeable only by association, has the cause of
its ill effect on the passions evident enough at the first impression; in ordinary
cases, it is indeed frequently lost; but this is, because the original association
was made very early, and the consequent impression repeated often. In our instance,
there was no time for such a habit; and there is no reason to think that the ill
effects of black on his imagination were more owing to its connexion with any
disagreeable ideas, than that the good effects of more cheerful colours were derived
from their connexion with pleasuring ones. They had both probably their effects
from their natural operation.