登陆注册
5270500000092

第92章 CHAPTER XXXVII(1)

IT is curious if one lives long enough to watch the change of taste in books. I have no lending-library statistics at hand, but judging by the reading of young people, or of those who read merely for their amusement, the authors they patronise are nearly all living or very recent. What we old stagers esteemed as classical in fiction and BELLES-LETTRES are sealed books to the present generation. It is an exception, for instance, to meet with a young man or young woman who has read Walter Scott. Perhaps Balzac's reason is the true one. Scott, says he, 'est sans passion; il l'ignore, ou peut-etre lui etait-elle interdite par les moeurs hypocrites de son pays. Pour lui la femme est le devoir incarne. A de rares exceptions pres, ses heroines sont absolument les memes ... La femme porte le desordre dans la societe par la passion. La passion a des accidents infinis. Peignez donc les passions, vous aurez les sources immenses dont s'est prive ce grand genie pour etre lu dans toutes les familles de la prude Angleterre.' Does not Thackeray lament that since Fielding no novelist has dared to face the national affectation of prudery? No English author who valued his reputation would venture to write as Anatole France writes, even if he could. Yet I pity the man who does not delight in the genius that created M. Bergeret.

A well-known author said to me the other day, he did not believe that Thackeray himself would be popular were he writing now for the first time - not because of his freedom, but because the public taste has altered. No present age can predict immortality for the works of its day; yet to say that what is intrinsically good is good for all time is but a truism. The misfortune is that much of the best in literature shares the fate of the best of ancient monuments and noble cities; the cumulative rubbish of ages buries their splendours, till we know not where to find them. The day may come when the most valuable service of the man of letters will be to unearth the lost treasures and display them, rather than add his grain of dust to the ever-increasing middens.

Is Carlyle forgotten yet, I wonder? How much did my contemporaries owe to him in their youth? How readily we followed a leader so sure of himself, so certain of his own evangel. What an aid to strength to be assured that the true hero is the morally strong man. One does not criticise what one loves; one didn't look too closely into the doctrine that, might is right, for somehow he managed to persuade us that right makes the might - that the strong man is the man who, for the most part, does act rightly. He is not over-patient with human frailty, to be sure, and is apt, as Herbert Spencer found, to fling about his scorn rather recklessly. One fancies sometimes that he has more respect for a genuine bad man than for a sham good one. In fact, his 'Eternal Verities' come pretty much to the same as Darwin's 'Law of the advancement of all organic bodies'; 'let the strong live, and the weakest die.' He had no objection to seeing 'the young cuckoo ejecting its foster-brothers, or ants making slaves.' But he atones for all this by his hatred of cant and hypocrisy. It is for his manliness that we love him, for his honesty, for his indifference to any mortal's approval save that of Thomas Carlyle. He convinces us that right thinking is good, but that right doing is much better. And so it is that he does honour to men of action like his beloved Oliver, and Fritz, - neither of them paragons of wisdom or of goodness, but men of doughty deeds.

Just about this time I narrowly missed a longed-for chance of meeting this hero of my PENATES. Lady Ashburton - Carlyle's Lady Ashburton - knowing my admiration, kindly invited me to The Grange, while he was there. The house was full - mainly of ministers or ex-ministers, - Cornewall Lewis, Sir Charles Wood, Sir James Graham, Albany Fonblanque, Mr. Ellice, and Charles Buller - Carlyle's only pupil; but the great man himself had left an hour before I got there. I often met him afterwards, but never to make his acquaintance. Of course, I knew nothing of his special friendship for Lady Ashburton, which we are told was not altogether shared by Mrs. Carlyle; but I well remember the interest which Lady Ashburton seemed to take in his praise, how my enthusiasm seemed to please her, and how Carlyle and his works were topics she was never tired of discussing.

The South Western line to Alresford was not then made, and I had to post part of the way from London to The Grange. My chaise companion was a man very well known in 'Society'; and though not remarkably popular, was not altogether undistinguished, as the following little tale will attest.

Frederick Byng, one of the Torrington branch of the Byngs, was chiefly famous for his sobriquet 'The Poodle'; this he owed to no special merit of his own, but simply to the accident of his thick curly head of hair. Some, who spoke feelingly of the man, used to declare that he had fulfilled the promises of his youth. What happened to him then may perhaps justify the opinion.

The young Poodle was addicted to practical jokes - as usual, more amusing to the player than to the playee. One of his victims happened to be Beau Brummell, who, except when he bade 'George ring the bell,' was as perfect a model of deportment as the great Mr. Turveydrop himself. His studied decorum possibly provoked the playfulness of the young puppy; and amongst other attempts to disturb the Beau's complacency, Master Byng ran a pin into the calf of that gentleman's leg, and then he ran away. A few days later Mr. Brummell, who had carefully dissembled his wrath, invited the unwary youth to breakfast, telling him that he was leaving town, and had a present which his young friend might have, if he chose to fetch it. The boy kept the appointment, and the Beau his promise. After an excellent breakfast, Brummell took a whip from his cupboard, and gave it to the Poodle in a way the young dog was not likely to forget.

同类推荐
  • 唐诗鉴赏大辞典(上)

    唐诗鉴赏大辞典(上)

    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。
  • 送内弟袁德师

    送内弟袁德师

    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。
  • 扬州画舫录

    扬州画舫录

    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。
  • 上阳子金丹大要列仙志

    上阳子金丹大要列仙志

    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。
  • 小八义

    小八义

    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
  • 请叫我史莱姆大人

    请叫我史莱姆大人

    被刺身死,异界复生,是何原因?异兽之躯,史莱姆之身,又从何而来?异族横行,人族卑微,又该何去何从?天降之人,星临传言,是玩家?还是异界旅客?黑暗漩涡,系统之谜,是金手指?还是阴谋?人类之魂,异族之身,到底该如何自处?被动穿越,各界经历,又会如何影响主角?是过客、魔王、还是救星?这是一个主角在异世界重生成史莱姆的故事。简介无力,敬请期待正文。
  • Black Beauty

    Black Beauty

    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。
  • 陈汉雄谜案追踪之鬼魅女人系列(中国好小说)

    陈汉雄谜案追踪之鬼魅女人系列(中国好小说)

    小说以鬼魅女人系列案件为故事主线,在侦破该案的过程中,发生了一连串的各类案件,围绕这些案件,侦探人员找到了其中的关联和蛛丝马迹,通过层层追凶,最终并追查到幕后指使,并将其绳之依法。
  • 史上无敌召唤者

    史上无敌召唤者

    召唤许褚:末将许褚愿为主上赴汤蹈火!召唤白起:为主上背负万世罪名在所不惜!召唤诸葛亮:五行八卦,斗转星移定乾坤!无论你是掌管无数人生命的帝皇,还是来自纵横万界的大帝。现在江河只考虑一件事情,该召唤什么来欺负你们呢?这是讲述江河从地球穿越到一个平行大陆上征服一切的故事。
  • 毁灭道

    毁灭道

    因为体质关系,本来以为已经不能修炼到武者的巅峰。一场意外让他得到妖界血帝传承掌握雷电之力,而且还得到一把绝世魔剑。带着魔剑来到修真界,却引起修真界的争夺。从武道到修真,与血帝之子一头变异神兽血狼走上一条杀戮的道路,最后走上天道的巅峰。
  • 痴情神君傲娇妻

    痴情神君傲娇妻

    上古有神名唤丝音,虽容冠六界,却以慈悲闻名。她一手执如椽之笔,一手握天命之书,掌世间万物之命格,乃是九天之上最为尊贵的神。神魔大战以身抵住断裂的擎天柱,被群妖围攻力竭而亡。人界感其恩,世代立其碑,供奉香火,千秋万代世世铭记。轮回归来的秦佳瑟瑟发抖:前世太过优秀怎么破?急,在线等!ps:仙侠甜文,男强女强,1v1,身心皆纯,请放心食用
  • 童女谣

    童女谣

    她,一个没落的秀才之女,大宅里毫不起眼的丫头,却有着最为明亮的眼睛。他,一个被拐卖的天骄少爷,大宅里最闪耀的风景,但他的眼睛却从未停在任何事物上过。他,一个最为年轻英俊的少帅,出身高贵给了他一颗高贵的心,他一手缔造了一个重生的她。她,重生归来,成为都统府高贵漂亮的小姐,前世今生双眼都不自觉的被面如冠玉的他所吸引。他,重回望族,成为城内最炽手可热的最佳郎婿,却内心冷漠无比,却被所有未婚女子又爱又恨着。他,一人之下万人之上的都统,高贵的灵魂让他做出了出人意料的选择。他,首府风度翩翩的大少爷,似乎完美的没有任何缺点,却爱上了青梅竹马的她,是真命,还是孽缘。他,城内城府最深的黑白大少,难道同样爱上了大家都心仪的女子?一纸缔约,终究如何落下?
  • 婚姻有毒,请勿碰!

    婚姻有毒,请勿碰!

    曾经以为牢不可破的婚姻在小三的面前原来是如此不堪一击!在这场变了质的婚姻围城里,究竟哪里是她的出口?他想让她全身而退?她只能如他所愿……
  • The Man Versus the State

    The Man Versus the State

    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。
  • 温度决定健康

    温度决定健康

    随着生活质量的提高,人们对健康的认识以及对健康知识的渴求明显增强,衡量健康的指标也变得多起来。可是,大部分人却常常忽视了体温。事实上,这个不被我们关注的重要因素不仅能够影响人体的免疫力,它还与新陈代谢、自律神经息息相关。