登陆注册
5249400000002

第2章 LEAVES FROM A NOTE BOOK(2)

A man cannot keep a daily record of his com-ings and goings and the little items that make up the sum of his life, and not inadvertently betray himself at every turn. He lays bare his heart with a candor not possible to the self-consciousness that inevitably colors premeditated revelation. While Pepys was filling those small octavo pages with his perplexing cipher he never once suspected that he was adding a pho-tographic portrait of himself to the world's gal-lery of immortals. We are more intimately acquainted with Mr. Samuel Pepys, the inner man--his little meannesses and his large gener-osities--then we are with half the persons we call our dear friends.

THE young girl in my story is to be as sensitive to praise as a prism is to light. Whenever any-body praises her she breaks into colors.

IN the process of dusting my study, the other morning, the maid replaced an engraving of Philip II. of Spain up-side down on the man-tel-shelf, and his majesty has remained in that undignified posture ever since. I have no dis-position to come to his aid. My abhorrence of the wretch is as hearty as if he had not been dead and--otherwise provided for these last three hundred years. Bloody Mary of England was nearly as merciless, but she was sincere and uncompromising in her extirpation of heretics.

Philip II., whose one recorded hearty laugh was occasioned by the news of the St. Bartholomew massacre, could mask his fanaticism or drop it for the time being, when it seemed politic to do so. Queen Mary was a maniac; but the suc-cessor of Torquemada was the incarnation of cruelty pure and simple, and I have a mind to let my counterfeit presentment of him stand on its head for the rest of its natural life. I cor-dially dislike several persons, but I hate no-body, living or dead, excepting Philip II. of Spain. He appears to give me as much trouble as Charles I. gave the amiable Mr. Dick.

AMONG the delightful men and women whom you are certain to meet at an English country house there is generally one guest who is sup-posed to be preternaturally clever and amusing --"so very droll, don't you know." He recites things, tells stories in costermonger dialect, and mimics public characters. He is a type of a class, and I take him to be one of the elemen-tary forms of animal life, like the acalephae.

His presence is capable of adding a gloom to an undertaker's establishment. The last time I

fell in with him was on a coaching trip through Devon, and in spite of what I have said I must confess to receiving an instant of entertainment at his hands. He was delivering a little dis-sertation on "the English and American lan-guages." As there were two Americans on the back seat--it seems we term ourselves "Amur-ricans"--his choice of subject was full of tact.

It was exhilarating to get a lesson in pronuncia-tion from a gentleman who said boult for bolt, called St. John Sin' Jun, and did not know how to pronounce the beautiful name of his own college at Oxford. Fancy a perfectly sober man saying Maudlin for Magdalen! Perhaps the purest English spoken is that of the English folk who have resided abroad ever since the Elizabethan period, or thereabouts.

EVERY one has a bookplate these days, and the collectors are after it. The fool and his book-plate are soon parted. To distribute one's ex-libris is inanely to destroy the only significance it has, that of indicating the past or present ownership of the volume in which it is placed.

WHEN an Englishman is not highly imaginative he is apt to be the most matter-of-fact of mortals.

He is rarely imaginative, and seldom has an alert sense of humor. Yet England has produced the finest of humorists and the greatest of poets. The humor and imagination which are diffused through other peoples concentrate themselves from time to time in individual Englishmen.

THIS is a page of autobiography, though not written in the first person: Many years ago a noted Boston publisher used to keep a large memorandum-book on a table in his personal office. The volume always lay open, and was in no manner a private affair, being the receptacle of nothing more important than hastily scrawled reminders to attend to this thing or the other. It chanced one day that a very young, unfledged author, passing through the city, looked in upon the publisher, who was also the editor of a famous magazine. The unfledged had a copy of verses secreted about his person. The pub-lisher was absent, and young Milton, feeling that "they also serve who only stand and wait,"

sat down and waited. Presently his eye fell upon the memorandum-book, lying there spread out like a morning newspaper, and almost in spite of himself he read: "Don't forget to see the binder," "Don't forget to mail E----- his contract," "Don't forget H-----'s proofs," etc.

An inspiration seized upon the youth; he took a pencil, and at the tail of this long list of "don't forgets " he wrote: "Don't forget to accept A 's poem." He left his manuscript on the table and disappeared. That afternoon when the publisher glanced over his memo-randa, he was not a little astonished at the last item; but his sense of humor was so strong that he did accept the poem (it required a strong sense of humor to do that), and sent the lad a check for it, though the verses remain to this day unprinted. That kindly publisher was wise as well as kind.

FRENCH novels with metaphysical or psycholo-gical prefaces are always certain to be particu-larly indecent.

同类推荐
  • 荆溪林下偶谈

    荆溪林下偶谈

    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。
  • 今水经

    今水经

    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。
  • 戊壬录

    戊壬录

    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。
  • 遯斋闲览

    遯斋闲览

    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。
  • 诗林广记

    诗林广记

    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。
热门推荐
  • 老婆立正稍息

    老婆立正稍息

    热情似火的太阳高照着荆市大地,从上往下远望,白花花的水泥路上似乎有腾腾的热气正层层的往上冒着。路两旁的树木经过与热情的太阳一翻严酷的比量之后,最终以失败告终——那便是耷拉着它那巨大的树冠,如离开了水的鱼儿一般,戚蔫蔫。差不多是用百米冲刺般的速度,杨怡急跑到自己的办公桌前,抱起桌上的一大堆资料,再度用百米冲刺的速度朝着影印室跑去。下午开会,所有的资料都必须在开会之前整理妥当。二十五份,每……
  • 归来之商海诡谲

    归来之商海诡谲

    惹上了她,从此生活再也不得安宁。且看一个强势彪悍的男人,如何在风云诡谲的都市生活中所向披靡,纵横无敌,缔造传奇!
  • 生物:细微之处显神奇

    生物:细微之处显神奇

    也许你不知道,仅仅在你诞生数秒钟后,一些微小的生物就会包围你并侵入你的体内。现在,正有数百万个这样的生物覆盖在你的皮肤上。在你阅读这一页书时,它们正聚集在你的鼻子、喉咙和嘴里。实际上,生活在你嘴中的这类生物的数量比生活在地球上的人还多。它们是如此之小,以至于我们无法看到或感觉到它们。当然我们也无法逃离或避开它们,在地球上的任何地方都可以找到它们的踪迹,例如土壤中、岩石上、北极的冰层中、火山及所有生物有机体上。这类生物就是细菌。
  • 冰山总裁的小白脸

    冰山总裁的小白脸

    方洛娶了个老婆,很有钱?还是总裁?于是,从这一刻起,方洛心安理得当起了一个小白脸。身为一个全球通缉犯,无物不抢,无所不会。寻找名花,龙潜花都,这个世界将会因他再次掀起滔天巨浪。(已完本《神级全能高手》、《特种护花高手》、《我的极品美女校长》!)
  • 灵气复苏的后现代生活

    灵气复苏的后现代生活

    灵气复苏了,世界变幻,你想要的生活来临了是中二的大呼一声拯救世界,还是咸鱼到底选择权在你自己的手中
  • 天使对我说

    天使对我说

    一年的时间,足够我们忘记一切不想忘记的,一座城市,一段经历,一个人。被过去套住,搁浅在回忆里,静静观望。
  • 婚后宠之老婆第一

    婚后宠之老婆第一

    男人对女人一见钟情的是什么?身材?脸蛋?NO!是声音!一场爱情,就在一朵花开的时间里,萌生了……爱的很顺利,但是守护爱情的路很艰辛,只要蛋无缝,再多的苍蝇她也不怕!片段一:夏雪后怕的往下面看看,幸好没摔下去,那么长的楼梯,这一脚踏空,可就一滚到底了,还是在机场,这么多人看着,从此怎么面对人生啊!夏天听着动静,看到是自家的妹子,跟章鱼一样巴在一个男人的怀里,真是……夏雪回头,看着自己抱着一个男人,吓了一跳:“啊,对,对,对不起,我不是故意的”片段二:齐浩然不甘心的抓住夏雪“那男人有什么好,你为什么就不能回头呢!”夏雪不耐烦的挥开齐浩然的手:“他哪都比你好,他是你比不了的男人,我这辈子就认定他了,我的男人用的着你评论吗,你刚还骂我,KAO,你竟然敢骂我……”夏雪生气的拖着齐浩然,一顿拳打脚踢,最后还不解恨的一脚将他踹到了喷泉池子里……”
  • 炎徼纪闻

    炎徼纪闻

    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。
  • 罗密欧与朱丽叶

    罗密欧与朱丽叶

    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。
  • 致你以长情岁月

    致你以长情岁月

    你听说过孤寂吗?那是孤独和寂默的结合。在那个暖阳悠悠的九月,雪寂默遇见了自己人生中的‘意外’,那个双面性格的少年,让她明白了什么叫一见钟情。第一次倒追,第一次恋爱,第一次牵手,第一次当着他的面前哭泣......两个人越来越有默契,但是却又分离......他名孤独,她名寂默,两个人在一起,他不孤独,她不寂默。这一次的长情,只在岁月中,也致你……