登陆注册
5249400000003

第3章 LEAVES FROM A NOTE BOOK(3)

I HAVE lately discovered that Master Harry Sandford of England, the priggish little boy in the story of "Sandford and Merton," has a worthy American cousin in one Elsie Dinsmore, who sedately pirouettes through a seemingly end-less succession of girls' books. I came across a nest of fifteen of them the other day. This impossible female is carried from infancy up to grandmotherhood, and is, I believe, still lei-surely pursuing her way down to the tomb in an ecstatic state of uninterrupted didacticism. There are twenty-five volumes of her and the grand-daughter, who is also christened Elsie, and is her grandmother's own child, with the same preco-cious readiness to dispense ethical instruction to her elders. An interesting instance of hereditary talent!

H-----'s intellect resembles a bamboo--slender, graceful, and hollow. Personally, he is long and narrow, and looks as if he might have been the product of a rope-walk. He is loosely put together, like an ill-constructed sentence, and affects me like one. His figure is ungrammatical.

AMERICAN humor is nearly as ephemeral as the flowers that bloom in the spring. Each gen-eration has its own crop, and, as a rule, insists on cultivating a new kind. That of 1860, if it were to break into blossom at the present moment, would probably be left to fade upon the stem.

Humor is a delicate shrub, with the passing hectic flush of its time. The current-topic variety is especially subject to very early frosts, as is also the dialectic species. Mark Twain's humor is not to be classed with the fragile plants; it has a serious root striking deep down into rich earth, and I think it will go on flowering indefinitely.

I HAVE been imagining an ideal critical journal, whose plan should involve the discharge of the chief literary critic and the installment of a fresh censor on the completion of each issue. To place a man in permanent absolute control of a certain number of pages, in which to express his opinions, is to place him in a position of great personal danger, It is almost inevitable that he should come to overrate the importance of those opinions, to take himself with far too much seriousness, and in the end adopt the dogma of his own infallibility. The liberty to summon this or that man-of-letters to a supposititious bar of justice is apt to beget in the self-ap-pointed judge an exaggerated sense of superi-ority. He becomes impatient of any rulings not his, and says in effect, if not in so many words:

" I am Sir Oracle, and when I ope my lips let no dog bark." When the critic reaches this exalted frame of mind his slight usefulness is gone.

AFTER a debauch of thunder-shower, the weather takes the pledge and signs it with a rainbow.

I LIKE to have a thing suggested rather than told in full. When every detail is given, the mind rests satisfied, and the imagination loses the desire to use its own wings. The partly draped statue has a charm which the nude lacks. Who would have those marble folds slip from the raised knee of the Venus of Melos? Hawthorne knew how to make his lovely thought lovelier by sometimes half veiling it.

I HAVE just tested the nib of a new pen on a slight fancy which Herrick has handled twice in the "Hesperides." The fancy, however, is not Herrick's; it is as old as poetry and the ex-aggeration of lovers, and I have the same privi-lege as another to try my fortune with it:

UP ROOS THE SONNE, AND UP ROOS EMELYE

CHAUCER

When some hand has partly drawn The cloudy curtains of her bed, And my lady's golden head Glimmers in the dusk like dawn, Then methinks is day begun.

Later, when her dream has ceased And she softly stirs and wakes, Then it is as when the East A sudden rosy magic takes From the cloud-enfolded sun, And full day breaks!

Shakespeare, who has done so much to discour-age literature by anticipating everybody, puts the whole matter into a nutshell:

But soft! what light through yonder window breaks?

It is the east, and Juliet is the sun.

THERE is a phrase spoken by Hamlet which I

have seen quoted innumerable times, and never once correctly. Hamlet, addressing Horatio, says:

Give me that man That is not passion's slave, and I will wear him In my heart's core, ay, in my heart of heart.

The words italicized are invariably written "heart of hearts"--as if a person possessed that organ in duplicate. Perhaps no one living, with the exception of Sir Henry Irving, is more familiar with the play of Hamlet than my good friend Mr. Bram Stoker, who makes his heart plural on two occasions in his recent novel, "The Mystery of the Sea." Mrs. Humphry Ward also twice misquotes the passage in "Lady Rose's Daughter."

BOOKS that have become classics--books that ave had their day and now get more praise than perusal--always remind me of venerable colonels and majors and captains who, having reached the age limit, find themselves retired upon half pay.

WHETHER or not the fretful porcupine rolls itself into a ball is a subject over which my friend John Burroughs and several brother naturalists have lately become as heated as if the question involved points of theology. Up among the Adirondacks, and in the very heart of the re-gion of porcupines, I happen to have a modest cottage. This retreat is called The Porcupine, and I ought by good rights to know something about the habits of the small animal from which it derives its name. Last winter my dog Buster used to return home on an average of three times a month from an excursion up Mt. Pisgah with his nose stuck full of quills, and he ought to have some concrete ideas on the subject. We two, then, are prepared to testify that the por-cupine in its moments of relaxation occasion-ally contracts itself into what might be taken for a ball by persons not too difficult to please in the matter of spheres. But neither Buster nor I--being unwilling to get into trouble--would like to assert that it is an actual ball.

同类推荐
  • 洞玄灵宝五老摄召北酆鬼魔赤书玉诀

    洞玄灵宝五老摄召北酆鬼魔赤书玉诀

    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。
  • 太古集

    太古集

    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。
  • 贤圣集伽陀一百颂

    贤圣集伽陀一百颂

    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。
  • 张积中传

    张积中传

    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。
  • 遗山集

    遗山集

    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
  • 涩食尽果

    涩食尽果

    辛蕾遇上施博文,她以为他只是个纨绔子弟,不曾想,他还是一个未婚妻死于非命的受害者。好友的死,未婚妻的死,‘死’将两人纠缠在一起。辛蕾爱上施博文,她害怕他是个玩弄感情于手掌间的人,不曾想,她于他,不是命,却跨越了生死。面对她,他愿用性命,去换取她一生安乐。前尘已逝,只愿此生会有一人,死生契阔,白头到老。
  • 历史名人之谜(求知探索)

    历史名人之谜(求知探索)

    当我们以惊叹的目光回望这段遥远的历史时光时,我们发现,这里有高贵优雅的汉谟拉比王,正以恢宏的气势写就人类史上的第一部法典;这里有从容安详的释迦牟尼佛祖,正端坐在菩提树下凝思;这里有聪明睿智的阿基米德,用纤细的杠杆撬起地球。
  • 隐婚总裁霸道宠:薄少,求放过

    隐婚总裁霸道宠:薄少,求放过

    【新书已发《爵爷好凶猛:吻安,小甜妻》】人人都说神秘家族薄二少爷冷酷、狠绝不近女色,传闻是个高位残疾、身有隐疾的男人。而慕时念听了则是叫苦连连,这个道貌岸然的男人哪里是不近女色,是个实打实的流氓!她逃,他追,将她禁锢:“女人,你觉得成为了我的人,还有逃脱的可能吗?”他的缠绵不休,让她忍无可忍,“离婚!我带着孩子过!”推荐我另一本书《总裁在上:新妻,不要闹》《重生军婚:首长,宠上瘾》
  • 我家竹马太腹黑

    我家竹马太腹黑

    时隔六年不见,竹马摇身一变,成了她的男朋友!小青梅桃花多怎么办?掐!来一个掐一个!来一群通通灭掉!小青梅不听话怎么办?宠!宠的她无法无天,只做他一个人的小可爱!
  • 老大不小

    老大不小

    一部很“私人”化的小说——中年人的内心底层的情感及敏感的婚姻状况。
  • 外科全生集

    外科全生集

    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。
  • 西关往事

    西关往事

    本书设定:无厘头式的半意识流喜剧小说。文笔风格:以诙谐生动、夸张搞笑、插科打诨的方式来讲述我在西关的往事。作者承诺:这是一本能够令人捧腹大笑的小说,描写了现实中小人物的大乐趣。读者评价:本书每段都充满了精雕细琢的幽默感,是睡前阅读、茅房如厕的必备!QQ读者群:743583288。
  • 网游之无敌神豪直播系统

    网游之无敌神豪直播系统

    【技术流神豪爽文!】曾经落魄的职业玩家陆天镜因家庭变故,惨遭女友劈腿,却意外获得无敌神豪直播系统,从此人生如同开挂一般,传说装备随手扔,神级药水无限续,就连顶级神兽都要抢着认他为主!从此神豪无限,吊打全球!陆天镜:“【神魔】真的是一款很简单的游戏,如果你觉得遇到了难关,那一定是因为你钱充的不够多……仔细想想,不充钱,难道你会变得更强吗?”
  • 仙魔学府

    仙魔学府

    当人类开启灵智,第一次用智慧的眼光审视世界时,意味着人类开始将命运掌握在自己手里。时光荏苒,万物更迭,人类以无与伦比的创造力,成为了这颗美丽星球的掌控者。然而相对于历史的长河来说,也不过如那朝生夕死的蜉蝣之物。不知自何时起,世人皆知有神仙之属,能腾云驾雾,上天入地;能移山倒海,呼风唤雨;能容颜永驻,寿与天齐。世上真有神仙吗?或许有,亦或许是世人精神的寄托。
  • 我家夫君要入赘

    我家夫君要入赘

    【已坑】慕容瑾在大门口顺手拉了一个男人假扮她相公,没有想到,这个人居然真的是她相公!怎么办,孩子他爹一心想入赘,她是收了呢,收了呢还是收了呢?