登陆注册
5696800000005

第5章

In the range of poetry selected by the compilers of the readers for my especial benefit as I progressed onward from the primary class into the grammar grades I find on examination of these earlier American authorities an even greater array of chuckleheads than appear in the prose divisions.I shall pass over the celebrated instance--as read by us in class in a loud tone of voice and without halt for inflection or the taking of breath--of the Turk who at midnight in his guarded tent was dreaming of the hour when Greece her knees in suppliance bent would tremble at his power.I remember how vaguely I used to wonder who it was that was going to grease her knees and why she should feel called upon to have them greased at all.Also, I shall pass over the instance of Abou Ben Adhem, whose name led all the rest in the golden book in which the angel was writing.Why shouldn't it have led all the rest? A man whose front name begins with Ab, whose middle initial is B, and whose last name begins with Ad will be found leading all the rest in any city directory or any telephone list anywhere.Alphabetically organized as he was, Mr. Adhem just naturally had to lead; and yet for hours on end my teaches consumed her energies and mine in a more or less unsuccessful effort to cause me to memorize the details as set forth by Mr. Leigh Hunt.

In three separate schoolbooks, each the work of a different compilator, I discover Sir Walter Scott's poetic contribution touching on Young Lochinvar--Young Lochinvar who came out of the West, the same as the Plumb plan subsequently came, and the Hiram Johnson presidential boom and the initiative and the referendum and the I. W. W.Even in those ancient times the West appears to have been a favorite place for upsetting things to come from; so I can't take issue with Sir Walter there.But I do take issue with him where he says:

So light to the croupe the fair lady he swung, So light to the saddle before her he sprung!

Even in childhood's hour I am sure I must have questioned the ability of Young Lochinvar to perform this achievement, for I was born and brought up in a horseback-riding country.Now in the light of yet fuller experience I wish Sir Walter were alive to-day so I might argue the question out with him.

Let us consider the statement on its physical merits solely.Here we have Young Lochinvar swinging the lady to the croupe, and then he springs to the saddle in front of her.Now to do this he must either take a long running start and leapfrog clear over the lady's head as she sits there, and land accurately in the saddle, which is scarcely a proper thing to do to any lady, aside from the difficulty of springing ten or fifteen feet into the air and coming down, crotched out, on a given spot, or else he must contribute a feat in contortion the like of which has never been duplicated since.

To be brutally frank about it, the thing just naturally is not possible.I don't care if Young Lochinvar was as limber as a yard of fresh tripe--and he certainly did shake a lithesome calf in the measures of the dance if Sir Walter, in an earlier stanza, is to be credited with veracity.Even so, I deny that he could have done that croupe trick.There isn't a croupier at Monte Carlo who could have done it.Buffalo Bill couldn't have done it.Ned Buntline wouldn't have had Buffalo Bill trying to do it.Doug Fairbanks couldn't do it.I couldn't do it myself.

Skipping over Robert Southey's tiresome redundancy in spending so much of his time and mine, when I was in the Fifth Reader stage, in telling how the waters came down at Ladore when it was a petrified cinch that they, being waters, would have to come down, anyhow, I would next direct your attention to two of the foremost idiots in all the realm of poesy; one a young idiot and one an older idiot, probably with whiskers, but both embalmed in verse, and both, mind you, stuck into every orthodox reader to be glorified before the eyes of childhood.I refer to that juvenile champion among idiots, the boy who stood on the burning deck, and to the ship's captain in the poem called The Tempest.Let us briefly consider the given facts as regards the latter: It was winter and it was midnight and a storm was on the deep, and the passengers were huddled in the cabin and not a soul would dare to sleep, and they were shuddering there in silence--one gathers the silence was so deep you could hear them shuddering--and the stoutest held his breath, which is considerable feat, as I can testify, because the stouter a fellow gets the harder it is for him to hold his breath for any considerable period of time.Very well, then, this is the condition of affairs.If ever there was a time when those in authority should avoid spreading alarm this was the time.By all the traditions of the maritime service it devolved upon the skipper to remain calm, cool and collected.But what does the poet reveal to a lot of trusting school children?

"We are lost!" the captain shouted, As he staggered down the stair.

He didn't whisper it; he didn't tell it to a friend in confidence;he bellowed it out at the top of his voice so all the passengers could hear him.The only possible excuse which can be offered for that captain's behavior is that his staggering was due not to the motion of the ship but to alcoholic stimulant.Could you imagine Little Sure Shot, the Terror of the Pawnees, drunk or sober, doing an asinine thing like that? Not in ten thousand years, you couldn't.

But then we must remember that Little Sure Shot, being a moral dime-novel hero, never indulged in alcoholic beverages under any circumstances.

The boy who stood on the burning deck has been played up as an example of youthful heroism for the benefit of the young of our race ever since Mrs. Felicia Dorothea Hemans set him down in black and white.I deny that he was heroic.I insist that he merely was feeble-minded.Let us give this youth the careful once-over:

The scene is the Battle of the Nile.The time is August, 1798.

同类推荐
  • 佛说圣庄严陀罗尼经

    佛说圣庄严陀罗尼经

    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。
  • Aucassin and Nicolete

    Aucassin and Nicolete

    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。
  • 梵摩渝经

    梵摩渝经

    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。
  • 释门归敬仪通真记

    释门归敬仪通真记

    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。
  • 桂林风土记

    桂林风土记

    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
  • 重生之超级法师

    重生之超级法师

    几十年前,他灭倭寇,闯鬼寺,锁妖龙,名震一方。然师门被灭,爱人离去,令他心如死灰。几十年后,他获新生,拾旧梦,诛心魔,转战都市。他是个法师,这是他的故事。
  • 扑朔迷离的化学宫殿(科普知识大博览)

    扑朔迷离的化学宫殿(科普知识大博览)

    化学是研究物质的。世界上那形形色色的物质,是由什么构成的呢?这个自然科学中最根本的问题,在古代就引起了人们的注意。公元前5世纪,我国的大学问家庄子就说过:"一尺之棰,日取其半,万世不竭。"意思是说,一尺长的短棍,若每天截取一半的话,是永远也截取不完的。
  • 热血痕

    热血痕

    这部小说写的是一个历史异常久远,但又为我们非常熟悉的故事,那就是春秋末期吴王夫差与越王勾践互相征战的坟事。此书是讲史中的优秀之作,对晚清政治颇多揭露。作者主旨是要国人记住外人之侮,雪耻自立,在国难当头之时,卧薪尝胆,共同对敌。所塑造的爱国志士,不畏困苦,复兴亡国,表达了作者的胸怀和理想。
  • 冰魄时空

    冰魄时空

    最强法王冰魄,出生阿达拉大陆,创立最强佣兵团,给大家诠释一个不一样的冰魄。
  • 雪朝异世

    雪朝异世

    鸿蒙无岁月、雪朝凌楚异象,时空大道逆行,上古入道境龙皇以赤灵芝为食,宁天子夺道基成血心,世家子弟凭自身修炼成长为一代君王、主持天地万物、世间万灵。一路热血.一路笑傲。成就非凡人生,血子临地启明星消失不见,到底是为何?一个个谜团等待凌楚去解决,穿插着爱情的高手生活过得太久了,只能当当贵族了。只有踏入混沌破碎虚空方才可以明晓生死,踏破万水千山,迷津人间百处至阴之火、至阳之冰!
  • 云栖法汇

    云栖法汇

    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。
  • 凤于九天:废后醉卧美男怀

    凤于九天:废后醉卧美男怀

    新帝黎小黑登基,糟糠皇后云姽婳却因莫须有罪名被废,众大臣百般求情才保得一命,被处以墨刑和膑刑,贬为庶人。云姽婳醒来后,心灰意冷之下,决心学孔圣人周游列国,趁机好好给皇位上的男人戴个绿帽子,各种绝世美男撩不停。琴帝许濡知,棋圣张泽时,诗鬼李枫荥,画仙王潇祾,剑祖侯锦屏,师宗郑圣尧,匠尊鲁荭薄,药王赵珏庸……还有“君子世无双,陌上人如玉”的公子小白。喂,那个狠心将云姽婳处以极刑的狗皇帝,你搀和个屁呀!
  • 抗日援朝1592(下)

    抗日援朝1592(下)

    史上最彪悍的抗日战争,大明帝国最后的绝唱!这是决定东亚三百年格局的关键一战,也是中国人赢得最漂亮的抗日战争。明朝万历二十年(1592),日本实际统治者太阁丰臣秀吉,挟统一日本之威,悍然发动针对朝鲜和明朝的侵略战争。应朝鲜国王李昖的请求,大明万历皇帝朱翊钧克服种种困难,毅然派名将李如松出师东征,抗日援朝。一场侵略与反侵略的血战,在朝鲜半岛拉开了帷幕……本书再现的正是这一段尘封已久而影响深远的历史。日本一代枭雄丰臣秀吉历经艰辛奠定的基业,在这场战争中分崩离析,最终落入德川家康之手,书中写出了两位枭雄的明争暗斗、权术阴谋。
  • 红楼之为你钟情

    红楼之为你钟情

    弱水之畔,三生石旁。灌溉之恩,恩义难忘。弱水之畔,悠悠情伤。救命之恩,情深不忘。悠悠竹林,潇湘之中。照顾之恩,恩情不忘。隐隐风雨,萧然亭中。两世之情,一生相报。虽然是妹妹和水溶之间的故事,但是却是另一种深情相望。
  • 超级版图:蒙古帝国的鼎盛荣光(上册)

    超级版图:蒙古帝国的鼎盛荣光(上册)

    上册成吉思汗传位窝阔台,由此引发两个儿子及其家族的明争暗斗。拖雷的大儿子蒙哥从小就表现出勇猛顽强的禀赋和杰出的才华,但由于窝阔台的打压限制,他的人生受尽磨难:女友被逼跳河、打胜被解兵权、父亲被诱服毒、母亲被辱下嫁……不过,蒙哥将怎样磨砺自己的意志?又如何在逆境中运用智慧,为蒙古大帝国超级版图的缔造,立下汗马功劳?