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