登陆注册
4249500000051

第51章

I asked him why he doated on a coach so? and received for answer, "That in the first place the company were shut in with him THERE, and could not escape, as out of a room. In the next place, he heard all that was said in a carriage, where it was my turn to be deaf," and very impatient was he at my occasional difficulty of hearing. On this account he wished to travel all over the world, for the very act of going forward was delightful to him, and he gave himself no concern about accidents, which he said never happened. Nor did the running away of the horses on the edge of a precipice between Vernon and St. Denis, in France, convince him to the contrary, "for nothing came of it," he said, "except that Mr. Thrale leaped out of the carriage into a chalk-pit, and then came up again looking ASWHITE!" When the truth was, all their lives were saved by the greatest Providence ever exerted in favour of three human creatures; and the part Mr. Thrale took from desperation was the likeliest thing in the world to produce broken limbs and death.

Fear was indeed a sensation to which Mr. Johnson was an utter stranger, excepting when some sudden apprehensions seized him that he was going to die, and even then he kept all his wits about him to express the most humble and pathetic petitions to the Almighty. And when the first paralytic stroke took his speech from him, he instantly set about composing a prayer in Latin, at once to deprecate God's mercy, to satisfy himself that his mental powers remained unimpaired, and to keep them in exercise, that they might not perish by permitted stagnation. This was after we parted; but he wrote me an account of it, and I intend to publish that letter, with many more.

When one day he had at my house taken tincture of antimony instead of emetic wine, for a vomit, he was himself the person to direct us what to do for him, and managed with as much coolness and deliberation as if he had been prescribing for an indifferent person. Though on another occasion, when he had lamented in the most piercing terms his approaching dissolution, and conjured me solemnly to tell him what I thought, while Sir Richard Jebb was perpetually on the road to Streatham, and Mr. Johnson seemed to think himself neglected if the physician left him for an hour only, I made him a steady, but as I thought a very gentle harangue, in which I confirmed all that the doctor had been saying; how no present danger could be expected, but that his age and continued ill-health must naturally accelerate the arrival of that hour which can be escaped by none.

"And this," says Johnson, rising in great anger, "is the voice of female friendship, I suppose, when the hand of the hangman would be softer."Another day, when he was ill, and exceedingly low-spirited, and persuaded that death was not far distant, I appeared before him in a dark-coloured gown, which his bad sight, and worse apprehensions, made him mistake for an iron-grey. "Why do you delight," said he, "thus to thicken the gloom of misery that surrounds me? Is not here sufficient accumulation of horror without anticipated mourning?" "This is not mourning, sir," said I, drawing the curtain, that the light might fall upon the silk, and show it was a purple mixed with green. "Well, well," replied he, changing his voice, "you little creatures should never wear those sort of clothes, however; they are unsuitable in every way. What! have not all insects gay colours?" I relate these instances chiefly to show that the fears of death itself could not suppress his wit, his sagacity, or his temptation to sudden resentment.

Mr. Johnson did not like that his friends should bring their manus for him to read, and he liked still less to read them when they were brought. Sometimes, however, when he could not refuse, he would take the play or poem, or whatever it was, and give the people his opinion from some one page he had peeped into. A gentleman carried him his tragedy, which, because he loved the author, Johnson took, and it lay about our rooms some time. "What answer did you give your friend, sir?" said I, after the book had been called for. "I told him," replied he, "that there was too much TIG and TIRRY in it!" Seeing me laugh most violently, "Why, what would'st have, child?" said he. "I looked at the dramatis, and there was TIGranes and TIRIdates, or Teribazus, or such stuff. A man can tell but what he knows, and I never got any farther than the first page. Alas, madam!"continued he, "how few books are there of which one ever can possibly arrive at the LAST page. Was there ever yet anything written by mere man that was wished longer by its readers, excepting 'Don Quixote,' 'Robinson Crusoe,' and the 'Pilgrim's Progress?'" After Homer's Iliad, Mr. Johnson confessed that the work of Cervantes was the greatest in the world, speaking of it I mean as a book of entertainment. And when we consider that every other author's admirers are confined to his countrymen, and perhaps to the literary classes among THEM, while "Don Quixote" is a sort of common property, an universal classic, equally tasted by the court and the cottage, equally applauded in France and England as in Spain, quoted by every servant, the amusement of every age from infancy to decrepitude; the first book you see on every shelf, in every shop, where books are sold, through all the states of Italy; who can refuse his consent to an avowal of the superiority of Cervantes to all other modern writers? Shakespeare himself has, till lately, been worshipped only at home, though his plays are now the favourite amusements of Vienna; and when I was at Padua some months ago, Romeo and Juliet was acted there under the name of Tragedia Veronese; while engravers and translators LIVE by the hero of La Mancha in every nation, and the sides of miserable inns all over England and France, and I have heard Germany too, are adorned with the exploits of Don Quixote.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 乱世凰谋:冷妃倾世

    乱世凰谋:冷妃倾世

    墨澜一直试图将和离书甩给某王,奈何这位标准的好男人却让她的计划频频落空。独断专权、狠辣无情的摄政王可怜兮兮地望着她:“夫人要休了为夫,也要问问团子的意见吧。”墨澜感到一阵不妙,“团子?”“夫人你忘了两个月前那个月黑风高寂静无人的夜晚了吗?”墨兰把拳头甩到了他脸上,“宗桓!你到底是西楚的摄政王还是西楚的采花贼啊!”摄政王笑呵呵凑了过去,“为夫采的正是夫人这朵花。”
  • 真武灵应护世消灾灭罪宝忏

    真武灵应护世消灾灭罪宝忏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 智慧的悖论

    智慧的悖论

    教育可以改变人生,对于残障人尤其重要。我和很多残障人一样,仅仅是肢体的病患,大脑却是正常的,智力的幼苗需要知识的浇灌。我独自在家,可以看看书,来排遣寂寞,有了打动心灵的感悟,还可以写下来。
  • 相爱要在漫漫长夜里

    相爱要在漫漫长夜里

    在楚子涵心中,喻蔷薇是个唯利是图的女人。没有人情,不会悲伤,心中只有钱。所以楚子涵羞辱她,看着她难堪。无论是身体还是内心,都被他一遍遍地折磨着。最后蔷薇无法忍受渴望逃离时,却直接被他所囚禁。“喻蔷薇,我要你亲眼看着,我和别的女人结婚时多幸福。”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 对不起,我不是公主

    对不起,我不是公主

    婿子蔓:个性有点强焊,不靠别人,有点打抱不平,子蔓深爱的人敬(巫仁敬)在去加拿大的飞机上因为坠机而去世,后面出现的男主角(沐启克)的表哥(沐启敬)竟然和去世的巫仁敬长的一模一样……因为心里住着敬。
  • 快乐的习惯:哈佛大学经典心理课

    快乐的习惯:哈佛大学经典心理课

    本书为人生励志读本,从哈佛经典心理课中选取了七种许多人时常想不开、悟不透的问题或误区,通过大量生动有趣的故事和画龙点睛的评议,启发读者养成快乐的习惯,保持良好的心态,更深刻地理解和把握人生。
  • 格林童话(上)

    格林童话(上)

    德国人格林兄弟,雅科布和威廉。他们两兄弟在1829年的春天离开他们居住了很久的佳瑟尔,搬到了格丁登。
  • 贵族学院:我的睡美男

    贵族学院:我的睡美男

    魏梓,18岁就已经取得教授之称的医学怪才。姚皇,从小就患有嗜睡症的花美男。两者原本永不相交的平行线却阴错阳差的相聚在圣光贵族学院中。每一次的相遇,她都在问路,而那个他却始终都在睡觉,两者之间一直维持着叫醒睡着的人与醒来指路的人,这样一个很是纠结的关系,明明是好梦的他,却被她打断,明明觉得这次不会迷路的她,却偏偏又迷路,淡淡的让人琢磨不透的爱,不知何时悄悄的在此刻萌芽,慢慢的滋生......
  • 悲伤的迪尔德丽

    悲伤的迪尔德丽

    《悲伤的迪尔德丽》是约翰·米林顿·辛格和叶芝共同完成的著名爱情悲剧。它改编自爱尔兰神话中迪尔德丽和康纳尔王的传说。迪尔德丽出生时,便有预言说,她会出落为美人,有卷曲的黄色发辫和迷人的灰绿色眼睛,但国王和领主们会为她发动战争……迪尔德丽长大后,康纳尔王要娶她做王后,但她却有了情人纳西。于是,康纳尔王派兵杀死了纳西三兄弟。最后,迪尔德丽在他们的坟前自刎而亡。此剧是一部辛格生前未完成的三幕悲剧,后来由叶芝和辛格的遗孀莫莉·奥尔古德继续完成。
  • 知觉知醒

    知觉知醒

    她,一个普通的再不过的女孩,有着自己的梦想和向往的自由!他是她的学生,世界这么大,注定要让他们发生不一样的故事!女主有主见,男主默默的支持着她!一段爱恨情仇!该是怎样的开始和结束!