第 5 节
作者:老山文学      更新:2021-02-20 04:46      字数:9318
  way through town; they are betrayed for a moment into taking part in any
  paltriness    that   may   be   there。   On    their  way   from   the    Steppes    to  the
  Atlantic they play havoc with the nerves of very insignificant people。                    A
  part; as it were; of every gale that starts in the far north…east finds its goal
  in the breath of a reluctant citizen。
  You will meet a wind of the world nimble and eager in a sorry street。
  But these are only accidents of the way … the winds go free again。                  Those
  that do not go free; but close their course; are those that are breathed by
  the nostrils of living creatures。        A great flock of those wild birds come to
  a final pause in London; and fan the fires of life with those wings in the
  act of folding。      In the blood and breath of a child close the influences of
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  continent and sea。
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  THE HONOURS OF
  MORTALITY
  The brilliant talent which has quite lately and quite suddenly arisen; to
  devote itself to the use of the day or of the week; in illustrated papers … the
  enormous production of art in black and white … is assuredly a confession
  that   the   Honours   of   Mortality   are   worth   working   for。 Fifty   years   ago;
  men worked for the honours of immortality; these were the commonplace
  of their ambition; they declined to attend to the beauty of things of use that
  were   destined   to   be   broken   and   worn   out;   and   they   looked   forward   to
  surviving   themselves   by   painting   bad   pictures;   so   that   what   to   do   with
  their bad pictures in addition to our own has become the problem of the
  nation and of the householder alike。         To…day men have began to learn that
  their sons will be grateful to them for few bequests。            Art consents at last
  to work upon the tissue and the china that are doomed to the natural and
  necessary end … destruction; and art shows a most dignified alacrity to do
  her best; daily; for the 〃process;〃 and for oblivion。
  Doubtless   this   abandonment   of   hopes   so   large   at   once   and   so   cheap
  costs the artist something; nay; it implies an acceptance of the inevitable
  that is not less than heroic。      And the reward has been in the singular and
  manifest increase of vitality in this work which is done for so short a life。
  Fittingly indeed does life reward the acceptance of death; inasmuch as to
  die is to   have been   alive。 There is   a   real   circulation   of blood…quick use;
  brief beauty; abolition; recreation。       The honour of the day is for ever the
  honour of that day。       It goes into the treasury of things that are honestly
  and … completely ended and done with。             And when can so happy a thing
  be said of a lifeless oil…painting?       Who of the wise would hesitate? To be
  honourable for one day … one named and dated day; separate from all other
  days of the ages … or to be for an unlimited time tedious?
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  AT MONASTERY GATES
  No woman has ever crossed the inner threshold; or shall ever cross it;
  unless a queen; English or foreign; should claim her privilege。 Therefore;
  if a woman records here the slighter things visible of the monastic life; it is
  only because she was not admitted to see more than beautiful courtesy and
  friendliness were able to show her in guest…house and garden。
  The Monastery is of fresh…looking Gothic; by Pugin … the first of the
  dynasty:   it   is   reached   by   the   white   roads   of   a   limestone   country;   and
  backed   by  a   young   plantation;   and   it   gathers   its   group   of   buildings   in   a
  cleft high up among the hills of Wales。           The brown habit is this; and these
  are the sandals; that come and go by hills of finer; sharper; and loftier line;
  edging   the   dusk   and   dawn   of   an   Umbrian   sky。   Just   such   a   Via   Crucis
  climbs the height above Orta; and from the foot of its final crucifix you
  can see the sunrise touch the top of Monte Rosa; while the encircled lake
  below is cool with the last of the night。            The same order of friars keep
  that   sub…   Alpine    Monte    Sacro;    and  the   same    have   set  the  Kreuzberg
  beyond   Bonn   with   the   same   steep   path   by   the   same   fourteen   chapels;
  facing the Seven Mountains and the Rhine。
  Here; in North Wales; remote as the country is; with the wheat green
  over the blunt hill…tops; and the sky vibrating with larks; a long wing of
  smoke lies round the  horizon。           The country;  rather thinly and   languidly
  cultivated above; has a valuable sub…soil; and is burrowed with mines; the
  breath   of   pit   and   factory;   out   of   sight;   thickens   the   lower   sky;   and   lies
  heavily over the sands of Dee。          It leaves the upper blue clear and the head
  of Orion; but dims the flicker of Sirius and shortens the steady ray of the
  evening star。 The people scattered about are not mining people; but half…
  hearted agriculturists; and very poor。         Their cottages are rather cabins; not
  a tiled roof is in the country; but the slates have taken some beauty with
  time; having dips and dimples; and grass upon their edges。                The walls are
  all thickly whitewashed; which is a pleasure to see。             How willingly would
  one swish the harmless whitewash over more than half the colour … over
  all the chocolate and all the blue … with which the buildings of the world
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  are stained!      You could not wish for a better; simpler; or fresher harmony
  than whitewash makes with the slight sunshine and the bright grey of an
  English sky。
  The grey…stone; grey…roofed monastery looks young in one sense … it is
  modern; and the friars look young in another … they are like their brothers
  of   an   earlier   time。  No   one;   except   the   journalists   of   yesterday;   would
  spend upon them those tedious words; 〃quaint;〃 or 〃old world。〃                     No such
  weary adjectives are spoken here; unless it be by the excursionists。
  With large aprons tied over their brown habits; the Lay Brothers work
  upon   their   land;  planting   parsnips   in   rows;   or   tending   a  prosperous   bee…
  farm。     A young friar; who sang the High Mass yesterday; is gaily hanging
  the washed linen in the sun。         A printing press; and a machine which slices
  turnips; are at work in an outhouse; and the yard thereby is guarded by a St
  Bernard;      whose    single   evil   deed   was    that  under    one   of   the  obscure
  impulses of a dog's heart …atoned for by long and self…conscious remorse …
  he bit the poet; and tried; says one of the friars; to make doggerel of him。
  The poet; too; lives at the monastery gates; and on monastery ground; in a
  seclusion which the tidings of the sequence of his editions hardly reaches。
  There is no disturbing renown to be got among the cabins of the Flintshire
  hills。   Homeward; over the verge; from other valleys; his light figure flits
  at nightfall; like a moth。
  To   the   coming   and   going   of   the   friars;   too;   the   village   people   have
  become well used; and the infrequent excursionists; for lack of intelligence
  and   of   any  knowledge   that   would   refer   to   history;   look   at   them   without
  obtrusive   curiosity。      It   was   only   from   a   Salvation   Army   girl   that   you
  heard the brutal word of contempt。            She had come to the place with some
  companions; and with them was trespassing; as she was welcome to   do;
  within the monastery grounds。            She stood; a figure for Bournemouth pier;
  in her grotesque bonnet; and watched the son of the Umbrian saint … the
  friar   who   walks   among   the   Giotto   frescoes   at   Assisi   and   between   the
  cypresses of Bello Sguardo; and has paced the centuries continually since
  the coming of the friars。 One might have asked of her the kindness of a
  fellow…feeling。       She   and   he   alike   were   so   habited   as   to   show  the   world
  that their life was aloof from its 〃idle business。〃            By some such phrase; at
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  least;   the   friar  would     assuredly     have