登陆注册
5380200000061

第61章 MR G.MOORE, MR MARRIOTT WATSON AND OTHERS(3)

Amid the too extreme deliverances of detractors and especially of erewhile friends, become detractors or panegyrists, who disturb judgment by overzeal, which is often but half-blindness, it is pleasant to come on one who bears the balances in his hand, and will report faithfully as he has seen and felt, neither more nor less than what he holds is true.Mr Andrew Lang wrote an article in the MORNING POST of 16th December 1901, under the title "Literary Quarrels," in which, as I think, he fulfilled his part in midst of the talk about Mr Henley's regrettable attack on Stevenson.

"Without defending the character of a friend whom even now I almost daily miss, as that character was displayed in circumstances unknown to me, I think that I ought to speak of him as I found him.

Perhaps our sympathy was mainly intellectual.Constantly do those who knew him desire to turn to him, to communicate with him, to share with him the pleasure of some idea, some little discovery about men or things in which he would have taken pleasure, increasing our own by the gaiety of his enjoyment, the brilliance of his appreciation.We may say, as Scott said at the grave of John Ballantyne, that he has taken with him half the sunlight out of our lives.That he was sympathetic and interested in the work of others (which I understand has been denied) I have reason to know.His work and mine lay far apart: mine, I think, we never discussed, I did not expect it to interest him.But in a fragmentary manuscript of his after his death I found the unlooked for and touching evidence of his kindness.Again, he once wrote to me from Samoa about the work of a friend of mine whom he had never met.His remarks were ideally judicious, a model of serviceable criticism.I found him chivalrous as an honest boy; brave, with an indomitable gaiety of courage; on the point of honour, a Sydney or a Bayard (so he seemed to me); that he was open-handed I have reason to believe; he took life 'with a frolic welcome.' That he was self-conscious, and saw himself as it were, from without; that he was fond of attitude (like his own brave admirals) he himself knew well, and I doubt not that he would laugh at himself and his habit of 'playing at' things after the fashion of childhood.

Genius is the survival into maturity of the inspiration of childhood, and Stevenson is not the only genius who has retained from childhood something more than its inspiration.Other examples readily occur to the memory - in one way Byron, in another Tennyson.None of us is perfect: I do not want to erect an immaculate clay-cold image of a man, in marble or in sugar-candy.

But I will say that I do not remember ever to have heard Mr Stevenson utter a word against any mortal, friend or foe.Even in a case where he had, or believed himself to have, received some wrong, his comment was merely humorous.Especially when very young, his dislike of respectability and of the BOURGEOIS (a literary tradition) led him to show a kind of contempt for virtues which, though certainly respectable, are no less certainly virtuous.He was then more or less seduced by the Bohemian legend, but he was intolerant of the fudge about the rights and privileges of genius.A man's first business, he thought, was 'keep his end up' by his work.If, what he reckoned his inspired work would not serve, then by something else.Of many virtues he was an ensample and an inspiring force.One foible I admit: the tendency to inopportune benevolence.Mr Graham Balfour says that if he fell into ill terms with a man he would try to do him good by stealth.

Though he had seen much of the world and of men, this practice showed an invincible ignorance of mankind.It is improbable, on the doctrine of chances, that he was always in the wrong; and it is probable, as he was human, that he always thought himself in the right.But as the other party to the misunderstanding, being also human, would necessarily think himself in the right, such secret benefits would be, as Sophocles says, 'the gifts of foeman and unprofitable.' The secret would leak out, the benefits would be rejected, the misunderstanding would be embittered.This reminds me of an anecdote which is not given in Mr Graham Balfour's biography.As a little delicate, lonely boy in Edinburgh, Mr Stevenson read a book called MINISTERING CHILDREN.I have a faint recollection of this work concerning a small Lord and Lady Bountiful.Children, we know, like to 'play at' the events and characters they have read about, and the boy wanted to play at being a ministering child.He 'scanned his whole horizon' for somebody to play with, and thought he had found his playmate.From the window he observed street boys (in Scots 'keelies') enjoying themselves.But one child was out of the sports, a little lame fellow, the son of a baker.Here was a chance! After some misgivings Louis hardened his heart, put on his cap, walked out - a refined little figure - approached the object of his sympathy, and said, 'Will you let me play with you?' 'Go to hell!' said the democratic offspring of the baker.This lesson against doing good by stealth to persons of unknown or hostile disposition was, it seems, thrown away.Such endeavours are apt to be misconstrued."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 帝妃侧

    帝妃侧

    当前世今生交织,爱恨情仇浮现,金戈铁马踏碎山河,苍茫大地谁主沉浮? … 她,百尺长梯上,一身赤焰华服踏不朽罪骨荣登奉天台,篡国运,改天命… 姻缘树下,也曾捧花赠良辰,惊鸿一瞥,世世不离… 听闻,史策只为英雄书,那她便做那令史官提笔的第一恶人。 这是一场天命的阴谋… …她,手持七星令,权纵天下。 他,九州帝王,那管他干戈玉帛,待他踏尽九州河山换她一个盛世长安…ps:一本不正经的古风
  • 国公女

    国公女

    顾长生的重生是自己拿不老不死这根金手指换来的,这一世,她只想做个最平常的侯爵世家小姐,过一世最平常的日子。
  • 我想,我能,我成功:心态积极成功不是梦

    我想,我能,我成功:心态积极成功不是梦

    现实中不同的人选择不同的生存之道,于是他们处于不同的生活状态,有的人依靠自己的体力和技能,有的人依靠自己的学历和知识,还有一部分人则依靠自己的观念和勇气。那些只能出卖体力和技能的人们,大都生活在社会的底层,而那些一味地追求学历和知识的人永远也不能成就大的事业,唯有那些不断更新观念,大智大勇者能成为上层之人,做时代的强者。
  • 壮士出山

    壮士出山

    她的出现,是这世上最美的风景,当她离去,世间对我来说就只是蕃篱。
  • 盗梦收藏馆

    盗梦收藏馆

    如果有一天你发现自己的生活或许仅仅是一场梦,一切的爱恨情仇都是虚无的泡影,当你恍然惊醒的时候,却全然不知此时的你正在进入另外一个梦境……真真假假,虚无缥缈的平行时空,通天彻底的时间长河,贯穿古今流贯时空,而此间的时空之匙,锁空密囚又将何去何从……欢迎光临Wang,让我看看你的梦,又或许做一场交易……
  • 清韵无痕

    清韵无痕

    韶清韵表示不懂,为啥子理想和现实总不那么切合呢?说好的走向田园的光明大道怎的说偏就偏了呢?还有…那个不想活的妹子,讲真,老天的厚爱真的不是你说不要就阔以不要的好嘛!好嘛!好嘛!
  • 毒医天下之王妃她太嚣张

    毒医天下之王妃她太嚣张

    她回到她原本的世界,掀起一阵腥风血雨。她可是要站在世界巅峰的女人!请看她如何将这天下搅的天翻地覆,这天下又如何为她掀起惊涛骇浪!众多美男前赴后继的为她铺路,而她,又将会选择谁?
  • 要有多坚强,才敢念念不忘

    要有多坚强,才敢念念不忘

    "每个人都有一颗年轻而伤感的心。在遇见自己的另一半前我们总会在生活的小道上漫步前行。有错过的时候。有疼过的时候。一路上总会有许许多多的陌生人在自己的生命中稍作停留,然后他们最终都慢慢的消失了。甚至此生不会再见。后来当我们再想起这些人的时候,仿佛在回忆另一个人的故事一般。
  • 剩女无敌之田园喜事

    剩女无敌之田园喜事

    她万万没想到,身为当代超级剩女的自己,穿越回了古代,依然是剩女一枚。而且这次似乎更加凄惨,失去了堂皇的产科硕士研究生身份,寄人篱下、衣食无着。好不容易攀上一户“豪门”,成婚当日却被山大王生生地掳了去,而且过了一夜即被送回,成了众人眼中名节不保的不祥之女…上有刻薄婶娘,下有年幼弟弟,接着又跟“前夫”生了一个不被承认的拖油瓶,凭借双手打出一片天地,将弟弟培养成威远大将军之后,却又碍于“巫医”、“下堂妇”的身份,担心影响弟弟的前途,毅然抱着孩子跳了崖…
  • 兵典

    兵典

    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。