登陆注册
5422300000006

第6章 ADVENTURES AMONG BOOKS(5)

"Valerius struck at Titus, And lopped off half his crest;But Titus stabbed Valerius A span deep in the breast," -I find, on the margin of my old copy, in a schoolboy's hand, the words "Well done, the Jacobites!" Perhaps my politics have never gone much beyond this sentiment. But this is a digression from Homer. The very sound of the hexameter, that long, inimitable roll of the most various music, was enough to win the heart, even if the words were not understood. But the words proved unexpectedly easy to understand, full as they are of all nobility, all tenderness, all courage, courtesy, and romance. The "Morte d'Arthur" itself, which about this time fell into our hands, was not so dear as the "Odyssey," though for a boy to read Sir Thomas Malory is to ride at adventure in enchanted forests, to enter haunted chapels where a light shines from the Graal, to find by lonely mountain meres the magic boat of Sir Galahad.

After once being initiated into the mysteries of Greece by Homer, the work at Greek was no longer tedious. Herodotus was a charming and humorous story-teller, and, as for Thucydides, his account of the Sicilian Expedition and its ending was one of the very rare things in literature which almost, if not quite, brought tears into one's eyes. Few passages, indeed, have done that, and they are curiously discrepant. The first book that ever made me cry, of which feat I was horribly ashamed, was "Uncle Tom's Cabin," with the death of Eva, Topsy's friend. Then it was trying when Colonel Newcome said Adsum, and the end of Socrates in the Phaedo moved one more than seemed becoming--these, and a passage in the history of Skalagrim Lamb's Tail, and, as I said, the ruin of the Athenians in the Syracusan Bay. I have read these chapters in an old French version derived through the Italian from a Latin translation of Thucydides. Even in this far-descended form, the tale keeps its pathos; the calm, grave stamp of that tragic telling cannot be worn away by much handling, by long time, by the many changes of human speech. "Others too," says Nicias, in that fatal speech, when -"All was done that men may do, And all was done in vain," -"having achieved what men may, have borne what men must." This is the very burden of life, and the last word of tragedy. For now all is vain: courage, wisdom, piety, the bravery of Lamachus, the goodness of Nicias, the brilliance of Alcibiades, all are expended, all wasted, nothing of that brave venture abides, except torture, defeat, and death. No play not poem of individual fortunes is so moving as this ruin of a people; no modern story can stir us, with all its eloquence, like the brief gravity of this ancient history.

Nor can we find, at the last, any wisdom more wise than that which bids us do what men may, and bear what men must. Such are the lessons of the Greek, of the people who tried all things, in the morning of the world, and who still speak to us of what they tried in words which are the sum of human gaiety and gloom, of grief and triumph, hope and despair. The world, since their day, has but followed in the same round, which only seems new: has only made the same experiments, and failed with the same failure, but less gallantly and less gloriously.

One's school-boy adventures among books ended not long after winning the friendship of Homer and Thucydides, of Lucretius and Catullus. One's application was far too desultory to make a serious and accurate scholar.

I confess to having learned the classical languages, as it were by accident, for the sake of what is in them, and with a provokingly imperfect accuracy. Cricket and trout occupied far too much of my mind and my time: Christopher North, and Walton, and Thomas Tod Stoddart, and "The Moor and the Loch," were my holiday reading, and I do not regret it. Philologists and Ireland scholars are not made so, but you can, in no way, fashion a scholar out of a casual and inaccurate intelligence. The true scholar is one whom I envy, almost as much as I respect him; but there is a kind of mental short-sightedness, where accents and verbal niceties are concerned, which cannot be sharpened into true scholarship. Yet, even for those afflicted in this way, and with the malady of being "idle, careless little boys," the ancient classics have a value for which there is no substitute. There is a charm in finding ourselves--our common humanity, our puzzles, our cares, our joys, in the writings of men severed from us by race, religion, speech, and half the gulf of historical time--which no other literary pleasure can equal.

Then there is to be added, as the university preacher observed, "the pleasure of despising our fellow-creatures who do not know Greek." Doubtless in that there is great consolation.

It would be interesting, were it possible, to know what proportion of people really care for poetry, and how the love of poetry came to them, and grew in them, and where and when it stopped. Modern poets whom one meets are apt to say that poetry is not read at all.

Byron's Murray ceased to publish poetry in 1830, just when Tennyson and Browning were striking their preludes. Probably Mr. Murray was wise in his generation. But it is also likely that many persons, even now, are attached to poetry, though they certainly do not buy contemporary verse. How did the passion come to them? How long did it stay? When did the Muse say good-bye? To myself, as I have remarked, poetry came with Sir Walter Scott, for one read Shakespeare as a child, rather in a kind of dream of fairyland and enchanted isles, than with any distinct consciousness that one was occupied with poetry. Next to Scott, with me, came Longfellow, who pleased one as more reflective and tenderly sentimental, while the reflections were not so deep as to be puzzling. I remember how "Hiawatha" came out, when one was a boy, and how delightful was the free forest life, and Minnehaha, and Paupukkeewis, and Nokomis.

同类推荐
  • 大明奇侠传

    大明奇侠传

    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。
  • 璇矶图

    璇矶图

    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。
  • TRANSFORMATION

    TRANSFORMATION

    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。
  • 补农书

    补农书

    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。
  • 过去现在因果经

    过去现在因果经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 林外野言

    林外野言

    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。
  • 鹤林天树植禅师语录

    鹤林天树植禅师语录

    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。
  • 符法逆天

    符法逆天

    混沌符道,万法归一; 符法无边,战无不胜! 王玄阳穿越到一个符道盛行的神奇世界,成为一个符道宗门的低级记名弟子,由于融合了前任的灵魂记忆,他的灵魂无比强大,从而拥有前无古人,后无来者的绝世天赋,再加上他又得到了符道世上最强大的混沌符道传承,从此以后,他的崛起势不可挡,神挡杀神,佛挡杀佛...且看他如何在天符大陆上纵横无敌,成为符法无边的绝世大能?
  • 买时代:消费创造新世界

    买时代:消费创造新世界

    五年前,大部分中国人购买一件衣服的过程还是这样的:首先要穿上外套、拿起包、锁上门,搭乘各式交通工具,忍受无处不在的拥堵,到达某处商场,用脚力丈量这里的每一寸土地,浏览品牌和店名,当终于决定进入某家店铺时,你可能已经略微疲惫了。不过你可不能休息,因为成群的销售人员会顷刻间涌上来,你试着一件又一件衣服,直到头昏脑胀、疲惫不堪,最终你指着其中一件说,好了好了,就这件吧。而在回家的路上,你疑心手里拎着的这堆沉甸甸的玩意儿到底是售货小姐的意愿还是自己的。通常,这样的流程大约最少耗费3—4个小时,即半天时间。而今天,从拿起一部智能手机到完成买卖需要多久呢?9秒钟。
  • 自控力成就杰出少年(你在为谁读书系列)

    自控力成就杰出少年(你在为谁读书系列)

    杨略经过人生规划,确立了目标,却遇到了种种新的问题:空有雄心万丈,却只有三分钟热度,稍作坚持就偃旗息鼓;作业总要拖到最后一刻,才哭着做完;不懂时间管理,做事东一榔头,西一棒子,忙忙碌碌,效率却很低下……面对高考的重压,杨略陷入了极大的恐慌,父亲及时地告诉他:要取得好成绩,实现自我价值,必须具备强大的自控力。
  • 惹上邪魅首席:缉捕小逃妻

    惹上邪魅首席:缉捕小逃妻

    她是K大的校花,和第一校草的男友原本是一对幸福的情侣。他是国内三大财阀之首费氏企业的总裁,拥有国内首席钻石单身汉的美名,英俊,成熟,有数千亿的身家。为了替父赎罪,她被父亲公司的人“送”给费氏企业的总裁费宕尘做情人。为了得到那纸合同,她献出了自己,垂泪在第二天悄然离去。当他醒来,兴奋的想拿出早已买好的戒指向她求婚,然而床边已是空无一人。他胸膛燃烧着愤怒,他发誓要把这个夺走他心的女人找回!
  • 最后一个修真者

    最后一个修真者

    地球从神话时代之后,修真练气士的命运逐渐走向了坎坷,以至于最后一个修真者联盟使徒都未曾留下传承。李北城在自己老爸给自己的奇怪手机里面获得了此身份,了解到地球之外的修真者联盟。
  • 千面公主与绅士王子

    千面公主与绅士王子

    有一个美丽的传说,(什么?童话?咳咳……重点在后面O(∩_∩)O哈哈)一个凡人女子爱上海里鱼宫里的宫主,两人的爱情路坎坎坷坷,最终也香消玉损,不过他们有一个爱情的结晶——鱼公主于小萱,她精灵古怪、十分顽皮、小小的年纪就不老实待在父王的身边,她留恋人世间一位书生,然而这时候又出现了真正的命中注定的恋人——龙王子,他温柔尔雅、风度偏偏,是每一位少女都向往的梦中情人,也是每一位父母都有种冲动绑架到自己家做乘龙快婿……
  • 媒介空间论:媒介的空间想象力与城市景观

    媒介空间论:媒介的空间想象力与城市景观

    城市不仅是一个地理样本,也是文化样本,其中的种种景观充满了空间的隐喻。基于对受到媒介日益深远影响的城市的关注,作者从媒介空间论的视角,对城市与媒介所组成的多样空间进行了深入细致的分析与研究。媒介在城市形成与发展过程中,是一种极为重要的表现途径。本研究并不回避媒介与观察者的主观性,相反,借助媒介的空间想象力,呈现了城市中各种地理要素及社会文化所组成的复杂面貌。《21世纪媒介理论丛书·媒介空间论:媒介的空间想象方式与城市景观》对城市的中心与边缘、政治图景与性别空间、城市的全球化与地方感等内容也进行了充分的阐释。
  • 快穿女:BOSS求不要黑化

    快穿女:BOSS求不要黑化

    崩了,想要改的话很麻烦,很多章节屏蔽得莫名其妙,不要看了,抱歉。【1v1】欺善怕恶扮猪吃虎颜控女X每天吃自己醋吃到吐帅霸总一个简单的快穿文。