登陆注册
5422300000019

第19章 RAB'S FRIEND(3)

Brown, asked why he did not write a novel. He was by that time over seventy years of age, and, though none guessed it, within a few weeks of his death. What he might have done, had he given himself to literature only, it is impossible to guess. But he caused so much happiness, and did so much good, in that gentle profession of healing which he chose, and which brought him near to many who needed consolation more than physic, that we need not forget his deliberate choice. Literature had only his horae subsecivae, as he said: Subseciva quaedam tempora quae ego perire non patior, as Cicero writes, "shreds and waste ends of time, which I suffer not to be lost."The kind of life which Dr. Brown's father and his people lived at Biggar, the austere life of work, and of thought intensely bent on the real aim of existence, on God, on the destiny of the soul, is perhaps rare now, even in rural Scotland. We are less obedient than of old to the motto of that ring found on Magus Moor, where Archbishop Shairp was murdered, REMEMBER UPON DETHE. If any reader has not yet made the acquaintance of Dr. Brown's works, one might counsel him to begin with the "Letter to John Cairns, D.D.," the fragment of biography and autobiography, the description of the fountainheads from which the genius of the author flowed. In his early boyhood, John Brown was educated by his father, a man who, from his son's affectionate description, seems to have confined a fiery and romantic genius within the channels of Seceder and Burgher theology. When the father received a call to the "Rose Street Secession Church," in Edinburgh, the son became a pupil of that ancient Scottish seminary, the High School--the school where Scott was taught not much Latin and no Greek worth mentioning.

Scott was still alive and strong in those days, and Dr. Brown describes how he and his school companions would take off their hats to the Shirra as he passed in the streets.

"Though lame, he was nimble, and all rough and alive with power;had you met him anywhere else, you would say he was a Liddesdale store farmer, come of gentle blood--'a stout, blunt carle,' as he says of himself, with the swing and stride and the eye of a man of the hills--a large, sunny, out-of-door air all about him. On his broad and stooping shoulders was set that head which, with Shakespeare's and Bonaparte's, is the best known in all the world."Scott was then living in 39 Castle Street. I do not know whether the many pilgrims, whom one meets moving constantly in the direction of Melrose and Abbotsford, have thought of making pilgrimage to Castle Street, and to the grave, there, of Scott's "dear old friend,"--his dog Camp. Of Dr. Brown's schoolboy days, one knows little--days when "Bob Ainslie and I were coming up Infirmary Street from the High School, our heads together, and our arms intertwisted, as only lovers and boys know how or why."Concerning the doctor's character, he has left it on record that he liked a dog-fight. "'A dog-fight,' shouted Bob, and was off, and so was I, both of us all hot, praying that it might not be over before we were up . . . Dogs like fighting; old Isaac (Watts, not Walton) says they 'delight' in it, and for the best of all reasons;and boys are not cruel because they like to see the fight. This is a very different thing from a love of making dogs fight." And this was the most famous of all dog-fights--since the old Irish Brehons settled the laws of that sport, and gravely decided what was to be done if a child interfered, or an idiot, or a woman, or a one-eyed man--for this was the dog-fight in which Rab first was introduced to his historian.

Six years passed after this battle, and Dr. Brown was a medical student and a clerk at Minto Hospital. How he renewed his acquaintance there, and in what sad circumstances, with Rab and his friends, it is superfluous to tell, for every one who reads at all has read that story, and most readers not without tears. As a medical student in Edinburgh, Dr. Brown made the friendship of Mr.

Syme, the famous surgeon--a friendship only closed by death. Ionly saw them once together, a very long time ago, and then from the point of view of a patient. These occasions are not agreeable, and patients, like the old cock which did not crow when plucked, are apt to be "very much absorbed"; but Dr. Brown's attitude toward the man whom he regarded with the reverence of a disciple, as well as with the affection of a friend, was very remarkable.

When his studies were over, Dr. Brown practised for a year as assistant to a surgeon in Chatham. It must have been when he was at Chatham that a curious event occurred. Many years later, Charles Dickens was in Edinburgh, reading his stories in public, and was dining with some Edinburgh people. Dickens began to speak about the panic which the cholera had caused in England: how ill some people had behaved. As a contrast, he mentioned that, at Chatham, one poor woman had died, deserted by every one except a young physician. Some one, however, ventured to open the door, and found the woman dead, and the young doctor asleep, overcome with the fatigue that mastered him on his patient's death, but quite untouched by the general panic. "Why, that was Dr. John Brown,"one of the guests observed; and it seems that, thus early in his career, the doctor had been setting an example of the courage and charity of his profession. After a year spent in Chatham, he returned to Edinburgh, where he spent the rest of his life, busy partly with his art of healing, partly with literature. He lived in Rutland Street, near the railway station, by which Edinburgh is approached from the west, and close to Princes Street, the chief street of the town, separated by a green valley, once a loch, from the high Castle Rock. It was the room in which his friends were accustomed to see Dr. Brown, and a room full of interest it was.

同类推荐
  • 冥报记

    冥报记

    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。
  • 法苑珠林

    法苑珠林

    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。
  • 无量寿观经义记

    无量寿观经义记

    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。
  • 大唐大慈恩寺三藏法师传

    大唐大慈恩寺三藏法师传

    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。
  • 古林如禅师语录

    古林如禅师语录

    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。
热门推荐
  • 碎紫

    碎紫

    紫色宝石落到了般若圣殿洁白的花岗石地面之上,伴随着一声清脆的微响,那传说中聚集天神灵气,蕴含改天换地玄机的紫水晶碎成了两半,崩向了大殿的两个不同方向,发出令人心碎的声响。其实此刻伴随那声响破碎的又岂止那充满灵气的紫水晶,更多的是般若圣祖有关曼达拉美好明天之梦,还有那天蝠王的一生戎马的卓越功勋……
  • 最具影响力的外交巨擘(上)

    最具影响力的外交巨擘(上)

    文学是一种社会意识形态,与社会、政治以及哲学、宗教和道德等社会科学具有密切的关系,是在一定的社会经济基础上形成和发展起来的,因此,它能深刻反映一个国家或一个民族特定时期的社会生活面貌。文学的功能是以形象来反映社会生活,是用具体的、生动感人的细节来反映客观世界的。优秀的文学作品能使人产生如临其境、如见其人、如闻其声的感觉,并从思想感情上受到感染、教育和陶冶。文学是语言的艺术,是以语言为工具来塑造艺术形象的,虽然其具有形象的间接性,但它能多方面立体性地展示社会生活,甚至表现社会生活的发展过程,展示人与人之间的错综复杂的社会关系和人物的内心精神世界。
  • 重生异能:郁少的神医甜妻

    重生异能:郁少的神医甜妻

    一个平凡的学生,竟然重生,得了空间,撩了军少。某军少果断出击:“我看中你了,你就是小军嫂”。某少兄弟“小嫂子快来,我们要减训”…………某安“好处呢……”某少兄弟“把老大给你……”第一次写文,多多关照
  • 佛说太子墓魄经

    佛说太子墓魄经

    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。
  • 重生之曼妙医师

    重生之曼妙医师

    她,凌思,中医界的权威,医学界天才。她,苏流瑾,X省军区苏家的大小姐,怯懦自卑的私生女。生母不知去向,生父对她不闻不问,在所有大人的眼中,她是个透明的存在,是同辈小孩欺负嘲笑的对象。一朝梦醒,她成了她,她不是她。在S省,所有人都知道一句话:你可以在玉皇大帝身上戳几个透明的窟窿,但是千万别得罪江家的人。他,江辰逸,S省省委书记最心爱的外孙,财阀江家的少爷,商界的怪才,霸道任性,没有他不能做的,只有他不想坐的。片段一:俊美的男人被五花大绑的绑在床上,脸色潮红,低低喘息。“说,还抽不抽?”恨恨的看着惹火的小女人,终于挫败的垂下眼睛:”在你面前在也不抽了。”…“不是说不抽了吗?”他一脸坦然:“我只答应在你面前不抽。”片段二:裹着浴衣出来,他邪笑着揽她:“是在勾引我吗?”门铃过后,一个小小傻傻的小鬼:“我来找爸爸。”她回过头笑得意味深深:“什么时候造的孽?”片段三:打开门,露出半边脸的男人,在床上和一个女人……脏死了,一甩门走掉。“为什么一直不见我?”“我有洁癖,我不喜欢别人用过的东西。”男人无辜的说:“可是我没有被用过啊!”一拍桌子,“那,那个女人是怎么回事?”某个人泪水连连,“那是我堂哥啊…”《重生之官家娇女》霜瓦流化好友的文哦,希望大家支持!《形婚》伯爵的胡须好友的文,多多支持哦!好友蘑菇殿下的文,希望大家戳几下,谢谢哦!
  • 悲哀的诅咒

    悲哀的诅咒

    斑驳而昏暗的灯光行踪诡秘,越是向前,它便隐藏得越深,直到最后完全看不到一点光线。远处只留下一片阴森森的黑色,仿佛要吞噬掉一切。从身后传来老师讲课的声音,本就微弱的声音在前面那一片氤氲的黑暗里更显得若有若无,令人不寒而栗。就连鼻子也仿佛嗅到了那里传来的死亡的气息。“这就是……那个传说中受诅咒的厕所?”我咬着牙问旁边的人。“对,就是它。”站在我旁边的任年航简短地回答,似乎不想多说一个字。任年航是这所高中的学生,他是校队的篮球队员,中等身材,却非常结实,方正的脸,眉骨突出,面相粗犷。
  • 矮子当道(同名美剧原著)

    矮子当道(同名美剧原著)

    同名美剧《矮子当道(Get Shorty)》原著小说。似乎厌倦了自己的身份,但又不知道还能怎么办。被卡在那里动弹不得,却只能默默忍受生活。这是收债人奇力的困境,似乎也是大多数人的困境。就像有些人半点也不关心他们的工作,但说到底也没有其他地方可以去。突然,有一天,机会来了。这一次他向一个电影制片人讨债,就此踏足充满魅力的电影圈。去他的债主老板,他早就厌倦了追钱讨债的无聊工作。拿上讨来的债款,他自己就是一个让人咋舌的好故事,他要把自己的反抗拍成电影。于是,一场造梦与追逐的闹剧,展开了。
  • 朴槿惠新传:在苦难中微笑成长

    朴槿惠新传:在苦难中微笑成长

    对于韩国民众来说,2013年3月25日是一个历史性的时刻。因为在这一天韩国人民迎来了他们的新总统——朴槿惠,韩国也将迈进崭新的朴槿惠时代。这一天,全球媒体的焦点都凝聚在这位花甲之年的亚洲女性身上。朴槿惠,韩国第一位女总统,第一位第二代的总统(父亲也是总统),第一位至今未婚的总统,第一位得票率超过半数的总统,第一位主修工程学出身的总统。她是将自己的全部精力奉献给韩国的“三无女人”。
  • 花开茉语香:美男坠入琼花帐

    花开茉语香:美男坠入琼花帐

    莫名穿越,竟然成了女尊国中最不受宠的小公主,爹不疼娘不爱也就罢了,奴才也敢狗眼看人低?这双眼睛留着也没用!尊贵公主们组团来找茬?让他们后悔从娘胎里生出来!后宫里训刁奴斗恶姊,朝堂之上指点江山,曾经的受气包公主如今风华绝代!咦咦咦,身边怎么多了一堆颜值高气质好的痴情美男,各个都缠人!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 世界最具智慧性的哲理故事(5)

    世界最具智慧性的哲理故事(5)

    我的课外第一本书——震撼心灵阅读之旅经典文库,《阅读文库》编委会编。通过各种形式的故事和语言,讲述我们在成长中需要的知识。