第 25 节
作者:精灵王      更新:2021-04-30 17:23      字数:9306
  common; I can only answer; that of all absurd and                     illogical arguments;
  this   is  the   most    so。   For    what    has   the  number      of    times   which     the
  miracle   occurs   to   do   with   the   question;   save   to     increase   the   wonder?
  Which      is  more    strange;    that  an   inexplicable      and    unfathomable       thing
  should   occur   once   and   for   all;   or   that   it should   occur   a   million   times
  every day all the world over?
  Let those; however; who are too proud to wonder; do as seems good
  to them。      Their want of wonder will not help them toward the                     required
  explanation:        and    to  them;    as   to  us;   as  soon    as  we    begin     asking;
  〃HOW?〃   and         〃WHY?〃       the  mighty   Mother       will   only   reply   with    that
  magnificent   smile   of   hers;   most   genial;   but   most   silent;   which      she   has
  worn   since   the   foundation   of   all   worlds;   that   silent   smile      which   has
  tempted many a man to suspect her of irony; even of                   deceit and hatred of
  the   human   race;   the   silent   smile   which   Solomon        felt;   and   answered   in
  〃Ecclesiastes;〃   which   Goethe   felt;   and   did        not   answer   in   his   〃Faust;〃
  which Pascal felt; and tried to answer               in his 〃Thoughts;〃 and fled from
  into    self…torture     and     superstition;      terrified    beyond      his   powers     of
  endurance; as he found           out the true meaning of St。 John's vision; and felt
  himself   really     standing   on   that   fragile   and   slippery  〃sea   of   glass;〃   and
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  close     beneath him the bottomless abyss of doubt; and the nether fires of
  moral retribution。        He fled from Nature's silent smile; as that              poor old
  King Edward (mis…called the Confessor) fled from her hymns                        of praise;
  in    the   old    legend     of   Havering…atte…bower;         when     he   cursed      the
  nightingales   because   their   songs   confused   him  in   his   prayers:         but   the
  wise man need copy neither; and fear neither the silence                  nor the laughter
  of the mighty mother Earth; if he will be but               wise; and hear her tell him;
  alike   in   both   …   〃Why   call   me   mother?       Why   ask   me   for   knowledge
  which I   cannot   teach; peace   which   I   cannot        give   or take   away?      I   am
  only     your   foster…mother      and   your    nurse   …   and    I  have   not   been    an
  unkindly  one。       But   you   are   God's   children;    and   not   mine。    Ask   Him。
  I can amuse you with my songs; but they                 are but a nurse's lullaby to the
  weary flesh。       I can awe you with         my silence; but my silence is only my
  just   humility;   and   your   gain。     How   dare   I   pretend   to   tell   you   secrets
  which He who made me knows                 alone?     I am but inanimate matter; why
  ask of me things which           belong to living spirit?       In God I live and move;
  and have my         being; I know not how; any more than you know。                      Who
  will tell you      what life is; save He who is the Lord of life?                And if He
  will not     tell you; be sure it is because you need not to know。                 At least;
  why   seek   God   in   nature;   the   living   among   the   dead?      He   is   not   here:
  He is risen。〃
  He is not here:       He is risen。      Good reader; you will probably agree
  that to know that saying; is to know the key…note of the world to                     come。
  Believe me; to know it; and all it means; is to know the                   keynote of this
  world also; from the fall of dynasties and the fate               of nations; to the sea…
  weed which rots upon the beach。
  It   may   seem   startling;   possibly   (though   I   hope   not;   for   my   readers'
  sake; irreverent); to go back at once after such thoughts; be they                   true or
  false; to the weeds upon the cliff above our heads。                 But He      who is not
  here; but is risen; yet is here; and has appointed them                their services in a
  wonderful order; and I wish that on some day;                 or on many days; when a
  quiet   sea   and   offshore   breezes   have      prevented   any   new   objects   from
  coming   to   land   with   the   rising   tide;  you   would   investigate   the   flowers
  peculiar   to   our   sea…rocks   and     sandhills。     Even   if   you   do   not   find   the
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  delicate lily…like      Trichonema of the Channel Islands and Dawlish; or the
  almost   as    beautiful   Squill   of   the   Cornish   cliffs;   or   the   sea…lavender   of
  North     Devon;     or  any   of   those   rare  Mediterranean       species    which    Mr。
  Johns has so charmingly described in his 〃Week at the Lizard                     Point;〃 yet
  an average cliff; with its carpeting of pink thrift and              of bladder catchfly;
  and Lady's finger; and elegant grasses; most                of them peculiar to the sea
  marge; is often a very lovely flower… bed。
  Not    merely     interesting;    too;   but   brilliant   in  their   vegetation     are
  sandhills;   and   the   seemingly  desolate   dykes   and   banks   of   salt      marshes
  will yield many a curious plant; which you may neglect if                   you will:     but
  lay  to   your   account   the   having   to   repent   your   neglect   hereafter;   when;
  finding out too late what a pleasant study               botany is; you search in vain
  for curious forms over which you trod               every day in crossing flats which
  seemed to   you utterly  ugly and           uninteresting; but which the good   God
  was watching as carefully as            He did the pleasant hills inland:           perhaps
  even more carefully; for          the uplands He has completed; and handed over
  to man; that he may          dress and keep them:          but the tide…flats below are
  still   unfinished; dry land in the process of creation; to which every                  tide
  is   adding   the   elements   of   fertility;   which   shall   grow   food;   perhaps   in
  some future state of our planet; for generations yet              unborn。
  But to return to the water…world; and to dredging; which of all                     sea…
  side   pursuits   is   perhaps   the   most   pleasant;   combining   as   it     does   fine
  weather sailing with the discovery of new objects; to                which; after all; the
  waifs   and   strays   of   the   beach;  whether     〃flotsom  jetsom;   or   lagand;〃   as
  the    old   Admiralty      laws    define    them;     are    few    and    poor。     I   say
  particularly   fine   weather   sailing;   for   a   swell;   which   makes   the   dredge
  leap along the bottom; instead of            scraping steadily; is as fatal to sport as
  it is to some people's        comfort。     But dredging; if you use a pleasure boat
  and   the   small    naturalist's   dredge;   is   an   amusement   in   which   ladies;   if
  they will;     may share; and which will increase; and not interfere with; the
  amusements of a water…party。
  The   naturalist's   dredge;     of   which   Mr。    Gosse's   〃Aquarium〃   gives        a
  detailed account; should differ from the common oyster dredge in                       being
  smaller; certainly not more than four feet across the mouth;                    and instead
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  of having but one iron scraping…lip like the oyster                dredge; it should have
  two;   one   above   and   one   below;   so   that   it    will   work   equally   well   on
  whichsoever side it falls; or how often              soever it may be turned over by
  rough     ground。     The     bag…net    should     be    of  strong    spunyarn;     or  (still
  better)   of   hide   〃such   as   those   hides   of   the   wild   cattle   of   the   Pampas;
  which   the   tobacconists       receive   from   South   America;〃   cut   into   thongs;
  and netted close。        It   should be loosely laced together with a thong at the
  tail edge in      order to be opened easily; when brought on board; without
  canting      the net   over;  and pouring   the   contents   roughly  out   through  the
  mouth。      The dragging…rope should be strong; and at least three