第 28 节
作者:片片      更新:2022-08-21 16:31      字数:9322
  that all; my lord?〃 said More; 〃then the difference between you
  and me is thisthat I shall die to…day;  and you to…morrow。〃
  While it has been the lot of many great men; in times of
  difficulty and danger; to be cheered and supported by their wives;
  More had no such consolation。  His helpmate did anything but
  console him during his imprisonment in the Tower。 (4)  She could not
  conceive that there was any sufficient reason for his continuing
  to lie there; when by merely doing what the King required of him;
  he might at once enjoy his liberty; together with his fine house
  at Chelsea; his library; his orchard; his gallery; and the society
  of his wife and children。  〃I marvel;〃 said she to him one day;
  〃that you; who have been alway hitherto taken for wise; should now
  so play the fool as to lie here in this close filthy prison; and
  be content to be shut up amongst mice and rats; when you might be
  abroad at your liberty; if you would but do as the bishops have
  done?〃  But More saw his duty from a different point of view: it
  was not a mere matter of personal comfort with him; and the
  expostulations of his wife were of no avail。  He gently put her
  aside; saying cheerfully; 〃Is not this house as nigh heaven as my
  own?〃to which she contemptuously rejoined: 〃Tilly vally
  tilly vally!〃
  More's daughter; Margaret Roper; on the contrary; encouraged her
  father to stand firm in his principles; and dutifully consoled and
  cheered him during his long confinement。  Deprived of pen…and…ink;
  he wrote his letters to her with a piece of coal; saying in one of
  them: 〃If I were to declare in writing how much pleasure your
  daughterly loving letters gave me; a PECK OF COALS would not
  suffice to make the pens。〃  More was a martyr to veracity: he
  would not swear a false oath; and he perished because he was
  sincere。  When his head had been struck off; it was placed on
  London Bridge; in accordance with the barbarous practice of the
  times。  Margaret Roper had the courage to ask for the head to be
  taken down and given to her; and; carrying her affection for her
  father beyond the grave; she desired that it might be buried with
  her when she died; and long after; when Margaret Roper's tomb was
  opened; the precious relic was observed lying on the dust of what
  had been her bosom。
  Martin Luther was not called upon to lay down his life for his
  faith; but; from the day that he declared himself against the
  Pope; he daily ran the risk of losing it。  At the beginning of his
  great struggle; he stood almost entirely alone。  The odds against
  him were tremendous。  〃On one side;〃 said he himself; 〃are
  learning; genius; numbers; grandeur; rank; power; sanctity;
  miracles; on the other Wycliffe; Lorenzo Valla; Augustine; and
  Luthera poor creature; a man of yesterday; standing wellnigh
  alone with a few friends。〃  Summoned by the Emperor to appear at
  Worms; to answer the charge made against him of heresy; he
  determined to answer in person。  Those about him told him that he
  would lose his life if he went; and they urged him to fly。
  〃No;〃 said he; 〃I will repair thither; though I should find
  there thrice as many devils as there are tiles upon the housetops!〃
  Warned against the bitter enmity of a certain Duke George;
  he said〃I will go there; though for nine whole days running
  it rained Duke Georges。〃
  Luther was as good as his word; and he set forth upon his perilous
  journey。  When he came in sight of the old bell…towers of Worms;
  he stood up in his chariot and sang; 〃EIN FESTE BURG IST UNSER
  GOTT。〃the 'Marseillaise' of the Reformationthe words and
  music of which he is said to have improvised only two days before。
  Shortly before the meeting of the Diet; an old soldier; George
  Freundesberg; put his hand upon Luther's shoulder; and said to
  him: 〃Good monk; good monk; take heed what thou doest; thou art
  going into a harder fight than any of us have ever yet been in。
  But Luther's only answer to the veteran was; that he had
  〃determined to stand upon the Bible and his conscience。〃
  Luther's courageous defence before the Diet is on record; and
  forms one of the most glorious pages in history。  When finally
  urged by the Emperor to retract; he said firmly: 〃Sire; unless I
  am convinced of my error by the testimony of Scripture; or by
  manifest evidence; I cannot and will not retract; for we must
  never act contrary to our conscience。  Such is my profession of
  faith; and you must expect none other from me。  HIER STEHE ICH:
  ICH KANN NICHT ANDERS: GOTT HELFE MIR!〃 (Here stand I: I cannot do
  otherwise: God help me!)。 He had to do his dutyto obey the
  orders of a Power higher than that of kings; and he did it
  at all hazards。
  Afterwards; when hard pressed by his enemies at Augsburg; Luther
  said that 〃if he had five hundred heads; he would lose them all
  rather than recant his article concerning faith。〃  Like all
  courageous men; his strength only seemed to grow in proportion to
  the difficulties he had to encounter and overcome。  〃There is no
  man in Germany;〃 said Hutten; 〃who more utterly despises death
  than does Luther。〃  And to his moral courage; perhaps more than
  to that of any other single man; do we owe the liberation of
  modern thought; and the vindication of the great rights of
  the human understanding。
  The honourable and brave man does not fear death compared with
  ignominy。  It is said of the Royalist Earl of Strafford that; as
  he walked to the scaffold on Tower Hill; his step and manner were
  those of a general marching at the head of an army to secure
  victory; rather than of a condemned man to undergo sentence of
  death。  So the Commonwealth's man; Sir John Eliot; went alike
  bravely to his death on the same spot; saying: 〃Ten thousand
  deaths rather than defile my conscience; the chastity and purity
  of which I value beyond all this world。〃  Eliot's greatest
  tribulation was on account of his wife; whom he had to leave
  behind。  When he saw her looking down upon him from the Tower
  window; he stood up in the cart; waved his hat; and cried: 〃To
  heaven; my love!to heaven!and leave you in the storm!〃  As
  he went on his way; one in the crowd called out; 〃That is the most
  glorious seat you ever sat on;〃 to which he replied: 〃It is so;
  indeed!〃 and rejoiced exceedingly。 (5)
  Although success is the guerdon for which all men toil; they have
  nevertheless often to labour on perseveringly; without any glimmer
  of success in sight。  They have to live; meanwhile; upon their
  couragesowing their seed; it may be; in the dark; in the hope
  that it will yet take root and spring up in achieved result。  The
  best of causes have had to fight their way to triumph through a
  long succession of failures; and many of the assailants have died
  in the breach before the fortress has been won。  The heroism they
  have displayed is to be measured; not so much by their immediate
  success; as by the opposition they have encountered; and the
  courage with which they have maintained the struggle。
  The patriot who fights an always…losing battlethe martyr who
  goes to death amidst the triumphant shouts of his enemiesthe
  discoverer; like Columbus; whose heart remains undaunted through
  the bitter years of his 〃long wandering woe〃are examples of the
  moral sublime which excite a profounder interest in the hearts of
  men than even the most complete and conspicuous success。  By the
  side of such instances as these; how small by comparison seem the
  greatest deeds of valour; inciting men to rush upon death and die
  amidst the frenzied excitement of physical warfare!
  But the greater part of the courage that is needed in the world is
  not of a heroic kind。  Courage may be displayed in everyday life
  as well as in historic fields of action。  There needs; for
  example; the common courage to be honestthe courage to resist
  temptationthe courage to speak the truththe courage to be
  what we really are; and not to pretend to be what we are notthe
  courage to live honestly within our own means; and not dishonestly
  upon the means of others。
  A great deal of the unhappiness; and much of the vice; of the
  world is owing to weakness and indecision of purposein other
  words; to lack of courage。  Men may know what is right; and yet
  fail to exercise the courage to do it; they may understand the
  duty they have to do; but will not summon up the requisite
  resolution to perform it。  The weak and undisciplined man is at
  the mercy of every temptation; he cannot say 〃No;〃 but falls
  before it。  And if his companionship be bad; he will be all the
  easier led away by bad example into wrongdoing。
  Nothing can be more certain than that the character can only be
  sustained and strengthened by its own energetic action。  The will;
  which is the central force of character; must be trained to habits
  of decisionotherwise it will neither be able to resist evil nor
  to follow good。  Decision gives the power of standing firmly; when
  to yield; however sligh