Bernard Mandeville
It began by speaking
of "A Spacious Hive well stockt with Bees, / That liv'd in Luxury and Ease."
Many of the bees were knaves, with no calling free of deceit, but while
"every Part was full of Vice, / Yet [was] the whole Mass a Paradise; /
... Such were the Blessings of that State; / Their Crimes conspir'd to
make them Great." Avarice, prodigality, luxury, pride, envy, vanity, folly,
fickleness, and inconstancy employed millions, encouraging ingenuity and
industry and creating pleasures and comforts "To such a Height, the very
Poor / Liv'd better than the Rich before." But many of the thriving bees
complained, shouting for honesty and virtue. When Jove "rid / The bawling
Hive of Fraud," economic collapse followed, with the consequent end of
arts and sciences as well; population declined; the hive's territory decreased;
and the remaining bees toiled long and hard for necessities alone. The
moral: "Fools only strive / To make a Great an Honest Hive."
Bernard Mandeville, The Fable of the Bees, ed. F. B. Kaye (2 vols.; Oxford, 1924), I, 17-37.