登陆注册
5241100000005

第5章 CHAPTER I(4)

But over against this picture we can set another, more intimate, more pleasing, although possibly not more discriminating. When the early graduates of Wellesley and the early teachers write of Mr. Durant, they dip their pens in honey and sunshine. The result is radiant, fiery even, but unconvincingly archangelic. We see him, "a slight, well-knit figure of medium height in a suit of gray, with a gray felt hat, the brim slightly turned down; beneath one could see the beautiful gray hair slightly curling at the ends; the fine, clear-cut features, the piercing dark eyes, the mouth that could smile or be stern as occasion might demand. He seemed to have the working power of half a dozen ordinary persons and everything received his attention. He took the greatest pride and delight in making things as beautiful as possible." Or he is described as "A slight man--with eyes keen as a lawyer's should be, but gentle and wise as a good man's are, and with a halo of wavy silver hair. His step was alert, his whole form illuminate with life." He is sketched for us addressing the college, in chapel, one September morning of 1876, on the supremacy of Greek literature, "urging in conclusion all who would venture upon Hadley's Grammar as the first thorny stretch toward that celestial mountain peak, to rise." It is Professor Katharine Lee Bates, writing in 1892, who gives us the picture: "My next neighbor, a valorous little mortal, now a member of the Smith faculty, was the first upon her feet, pulling me after her by a tug at my sleeve, coupled with a moral tug more efficacious still. Perhaps a dozen of us freshmen, all told, filed into Professor Horton's recitation room that morning." And again, "His prompt and vigorous method of introducing a fresh subject to college notice was the making it a required study for the senior class of the year.

'79 grappled with biology, '80 had a senior diet of geology and astronomy." To these young women, as to his juries in earlier days, he could use words "that burned and cut like the lash of a scourge," and it is evident that they feared "the somber lightnings of his eyes."

But he won their affection by his sympathy and humor perhaps, quite as much as by his personal beauty, and his ideals of scholarship, and despite his imperious desire to bring their souls to Christ. They remember lovingly his little jokes. They tell of how he came into College Hall one evening, and said that a mother and daughter had just arrived, and he was perplexed to know where to put them, but he thought they might stay under the staircase leading up from the center. And students and teachers, puzzled by this inhospitality but suspecting a joke somewhere, came out into the center to find the great cast of Niobe and her daughter under the stairway at the left, where it stayed through all the years that followed, until College Hall burned down.

They tell also of the moral he pointed at the unveiling of "The Reading Girl", by John Adams Jackson, which stood for many years in the Browning Room. She was reading no light reading, said Mr. Durant, as the twelve men who brought her in could testify.

"She is reading Greek, and observe--she doesn't wear bangs." They saw him ardent in friendship as in all else. His devoted friend, and Wellesley's, Professor Eben N. Horsford, has given us a picture of him which it would be a pity to miss. The two men are standing on the oak-crowned hill, overlooking the lake. "We wandered on," says Professor Horsford, "over the hill and future site of Norumbega, till we came where now stands the monument to the munificence of Valeria Stone. There in the shadow of the evergreens we lay down on the carpet of pine foliage and talked,--I remember it well,--talked long of the problems of life, of things worth living for; of the hidden ways of Providence as well as of the subtle ways of men; of the few who rule and are not always recognized; of the many who are led and are not always conscious of it; of the survival of the fittest in the battle of life, and of the constant presence of the Infinite Pity; of the difficulties, the resolution, the struggle, the conquest that make up the history of every worthy achievement. I arose with the feeling that I had been taken into the confidence of one of the most gifted of all the men it had been my privilege to know. We had not talked of friendship; we had been unconsciously sowing its seed. He loved to illustrate its strength and its steadfastness to me; l have lived to appreciate and reverence the grandeur of the work which he accomplished here."

III.

If we set them over against each other, the hearsay that besmirches and the reminiscence that canonizes, we evoke a very human, living personality: a man of keen intellect, of ardent and emotional temperament, autocratic, fanatical, fastidious, and beauty-loving; a loyal friend; an unpleasant enemy. "He saw black black and white white, for him there was no gray." He was impatient of mediocrity. "He could not suffer fools gladly."

No archangel this, but unquestionably a man of genius, consecrated to the fulfillment of a great vision. It is no wonder that the early graduates living in the very presence of his high purpose, his pure intention, his spendthrift selflessness, remember these things best when they recall old days. After all, these are the things most worth remembering.

The best and most carefully balanced study of him which we have is by Miss Charlotte Howard Conant of the class of '84, in an address delivered by her in the College Chapel, February 18, 1906, to commemorate Mr. Durant's birthday. Miss Conant's use of the biographical material available, and her careful and restrained estimate of Mr. Durant's character cannot be bettered, and it is a temptation to incorporate her entire pamphlet in this chapter, but we shall have to content ourselves with cogent extracts.

Henry Fowle Durant, or Henry Welles Smith as he was called in his boyhood, was born February 20, 1822, in Hanover, New Hampshire.

同类推荐
  • 二部僧授戒仪式

    二部僧授戒仪式

    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。
  • 儒林外史

    儒林外史

    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。
  • 古学考

    古学考

    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。
  • 罗天大醮设醮仪

    罗天大醮设醮仪

    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。
  • 洞玄灵宝玄门大义

    洞玄灵宝玄门大义

    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
  • 青少年学习方法课

    青少年学习方法课

    我们为什么要学习,还记得老师的悉心教导,和父母的耳提面命吗?是否用对了方法让你激流勇进呢。本书详细讲解了教育学习的方法。
  • 无量劫

    无量劫

    神兵出世定天地,大海无量隐玄机。天若阻我,就撕开这天!地若拦我,就劈开那地!!任它神魔乱舞、万难千险,都不能动摇心中的意念。兄弟齐心,大杀四方!让敌人的鲜血染红无量海,演绎感动天地的无量劫!
  • 纳尼亚传奇5:能言马与男孩

    纳尼亚传奇5:能言马与男孩

    故事发生在彼得、苏珊、爱德蒙和露茜统治纳尼亚的时期。一天,少年沙斯塔发现自己将被他的养父卖给一个凶恶的卡乐门贵族为奴隶。夜里,他和贵族的战马布里一起逃跑。布里原是纳尼亚会说话的马。沙斯塔和它一起逃往纳尼亚。途中,他们遇到了贵族少女阿拉维斯和她会说话的母马赫温。阿拉维斯是为了不满包办婚姻而逃跑的。于是他们四个便结伴而行。他们历尽艰险,还得知卡乐门王子拉巴达什在向苏珊女王求婚被拒之后,试图突袭阿钦兰的安瓦德城,再进攻纳尼亚。最后,沙斯塔拯救了纳尼亚和阿钦兰。胜利后,他发现自己是阿钦兰王子,原名科奥,自幼被居心不良的叛徒偷走,后被渔夫所抚养。他后来继承了阿钦兰王位,并与阿拉维斯结婚。
  • 女娲神卷

    女娲神卷

    世人皆知,天下最显赫的身份不是皇族,而是术师。鲜有人知,天下最精妙的武法不是五行武法,而是女娲神卷。
  • 农家食香

    农家食香

    一朝穿成农家傻女,父亲早逝,母亲寡弱,弟弟年幼,还有一个身份成迷的家伙一起混饭吃,这日子实在太难过!傻?那是以前。神马?你是落难世子!好吧,美食凭借力,送君上青云。多年后……喂,前头的帅哥,你还记得云家村畔的云小溪么!书友交流群:368295994,敲门砖为任一角色名~欢迎大家前来勾搭~(*^__^*)
  • 重生校园:男神改造计划!

    重生校园:男神改造计划!

    前世身为唐氏集团继承人的她,被渣男算计,落得被夺走身份五脏,含冤而死的下场。重生后,她绑定除渣系统,拥有超级兑换商城,得到慧眼识渣技能。并且得到某位爷的各种维护。后妈渣爹作妖?白莲各种挑衅?渣男前来调戏?唐轻轻阴测测一笑,“来吧,来吧,省的我自己去找你们了!”可谁知,作为她靠山的某位爷,每逢打雷都会黑化……每次黑化都会折磨的她生无可恋。且看她怎么样绝地求生,周旋于两种人格之间。
  • 拔节

    拔节

    1987年9月初的一个秋老虎肆虐的晌午,正在玉米地里“修理地球”的我,突然做出了一个后来证明是千真万确的、改变了我人生走向的一个关键性的抉择。我是这年的11月12日参军的,但我始终固执地认为其实从那天起,我就暗地里参军了。可后来在我梳理自己的人生历程时,又从记忆的仓库里惊喜地发现,我当兵的种子,却是在我六七岁那个刻骨铭心的上午埋下的,只不过它一直处于休眠状态,在我十八岁时才发芽了。玉米地里密不透风,又是在一天中最热的时候,我就像放在锅里蒸着的馍一般。“你就是当农民的命,心甘情愿种地吧,想啥都白扯!”
  • 高调甜婚

    高调甜婚

    津城大富豪俱乐部。晚上九点。云心因为哥哥的事伤心不已,一个人出来买醉。举着……
  • 东方兵圣:孙武(创造历史的风云人物)

    东方兵圣:孙武(创造历史的风云人物)

    名人创造了历史,名人改写了历史,那些走在时代最前列、深深影响和推动了历史进程的名人永远会被广大人民所拥戴、所尊重、所铭记。古往今来,有多少中外名人不断地涌现在人们的目光里,这些出类拔萃、彪炳千古、流芳百世的名人中,有家国天下的政治家,有叱咤风云的军事家,有超乎凡人的思想家,有妙笔生花的文学家,有造福人类的科学家,有想象非凡的艺术家……他们永远不会被人们忘记!
  • 青青陌上桑

    青青陌上桑

    俞桑筱身世显赫,却不被家族重视。意外中被龙斐陌施计陷入婚姻之中。突如其来的婚姻,看似无爱,却充满了他的守候。一番猎取一番挣逃,一场沦陷一场厌弃,纵使逃躲闪避,终将避无可避。待隐藏在岁月里的秘密浮现,她才终于明白了龙斐陌的深情,才发现原来自己也有资格软弱,也可以拥有一个人,静静依靠。