第 1 节
作者:管他三七二十一      更新:2021-10-16 18:45      字数:9322
  LEGENDS AND LYRICSFIRST SERIES
  LEGENDS AND
  LYRICSFIRST SERIES
  by Adelaide Ann Proctor
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  DEDICATION
  TO MATILDA M。 HAYS。
  〃Our tokens of love are for the most part barbarous。         Cold and lifeless;
  because   they   do   not   represent   our   life。 The   only   gift   is   a   portion   of
  thyself。    Therefore   let   the   farmer   give   his   corn;   the   miner;   a   gem;   the
  sailor; coral and shells; the painter; his picture; and the poet; his poem。〃
  Emerson's Essays。
  A。 A。 P。
  May; 1858
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  LEGENDS AND LYRICSFIRST SERIES
  AN INTRODUCTION BY
  CHARLES DICKENS
  In the spring of the year 1853; I observed; as conductor of the weekly
  journal Household Words; a short poem among the proffered contributions;
  very  different;   as   I  thought;   from   the   shoal   of   verses   perpetually   setting
  through the office of such a periodical; and possessing much more merit。
  Its   authoress    was   quite   unknown     to  me。    She    was   one   Miss    Mary
  Berwick;   whom   I   had   never   heard   of;   and   she   was   to   be   addressed   by
  letter; if addressed at all; at a circulating library in the western district of
  London。      Through      this   channel;  Miss   Berwick   was    informed    that  her
  poem was accepted; and was invited to send another。               She complied; and
  became a regular and frequent contributor。            Many letters passed between
  the journal and Miss Berwick; but Miss Berwick herself was never seen。
  How we came gradually to establish; at the office of Household Words;
  that we knew all about Miss Berwick; I have never discovered。                  But we
  settled somehow; to our complete satisfaction; that she was governess in a
  family; that she went to Italy in that capacity; and returned; and that she
  had long been in the same family。           We really knew nothing whatever of
  her;   except   that   she   was   remarkably   business…like;   punctual;   self…reliant;
  and   reliable:   so   I  suppose   we   insensibly  invented   the   rest。 For   myself;
  my mother was not a more real personage to me; than Miss Berwick the
  governess became。
  This   went    on  until  December;     1854;   when    the  Christmas    number;
  entitled The Seven Poor Travellers; was sent to press。              Happening to be
  going     to  dine  that  day   with  an   old  and   dear  friend;  distinguished     in
  literature as Barry Cornwall; I took with me an early proof of that number;
  and remarked; as I laid it on the drawing…room table; that it contained a
  very pretty poem; written by a certain Miss Berwick。               Next day brought
  me the disclosure that I had so   spoken of  the poem  to the  mother of  its
  writer;    in  its  writer's  presence;   that  I  had   no  such   correspondent      in
  existence as Miss Berwick; and that the name had been assumed by Barry
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  Cornwall's eldest daughter; Miss Adelaide Anne Procter。
  The anecdote I have here noted down; besides serving to explain why
  the   parents   of   the   late   Miss   Procter   have   looked   to   me   for   these   poor
  words   of   remembrance   of   their   lamented   child;   strikingly   illustrates   the
  honesty;   independence;   and   quiet   dignity;   of   the   lady's   character。    I   had
  known   her   when   she   was   very   young;   I   had   been   honoured   with         her
  father's friendship when I was myself a young aspirant; and she had said at
  home; 〃If I send him; in my own name; verses that he does not honestly
  like; either it will be very painful to him to return them; or he will print
  them for papa's sake; and not for their own。             So I have made up my mind
  to take my chance fairly with the unknown volunteers。〃
  Perhaps      it   requires    an    editor's   experience      of    the   profoundly
  unreasonable   grounds   on   which   he   is   often   urged   to   accept   unsuitable
  articlessuch as having been to school with the writer's husband's brother…
  in…law; or   having lent   an alpenstock   in Switzerland to the  writer's   wife's
  nephew;      when    that   interesting    stranger   had    broken    his  ownfully     to
  appreciate the delicacy and the self…respect of this resolution。
  Some      verses   by   Miss   Procter    had   been   published     in  the  Book    of
  Beauty; ten years before she became Miss Berwick。                    With the exception
  of two poems in the Cornhill Magazine; two in Good Words; and others in
  a little book called A Chaplet of Verses (issued in 1862 for the benefit of a
  Night Refuge); her published writings first appeared in Household Words;
  or All   the   Year   Round。     The   present   edition   contains   the   whole   of   her
  Legends   and   Lyrics;   and   originates   in   the   great   favour   with   which   they
  have been received by the public。
  Miss   Procter   was   born   in   Bedford   Square;   London;   on   the   30th   of
  October; 1825。        Her love of poetry was conspicuous at so early an age;
  that I have before me a tiny album made of small note…paper; into which
  her favourite passages were copied for her by her mother's hand before she
  herself could write。       It looks as if she had carried it about; as another little
  girl might have carried a doll。         She soon displayed a remarkable memory;
  and great quickness of apprehension。             When she was quite a young child;
  she learned with facility several of the problems of Euclid。                 As she grew
  older; she acquired the French; Italian; and German languages; became a
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  clever pianoforte player; and showed a true taste and sentiment in drawing。
  But; as soon as she had completely vanquished the difficulties of any one
  branch of study; it was her way to lose interest in it; and pass to another。
  While her mental resources were being trained; it was not at all suspected
  in   her   family   that   she   had   any   gift   of   authorship;   or   any   ambition   to
  become a writer。        Her father had no idea of her having ever attempted to
  turn a rhyme; until her first little poem saw the light in print。
  When      she   attained   to  womanhood;        she  had    read   an  extraordinary
  number of books; and throughout her life she was always largely adding to
  the number。       In 1853 she went to Turin and its neighbourhood; on a visit
  to   her   aunt;   a  Roman      Catholic    lady。    As    Miss    Procter    had   herself
  professed the Roman Catholic Faith two years before; she entered with the
  greater ardour on the study of the Piedmontese dialect; and the observation
  of   the   habits   and   manners   of   the   peasantry。    In   the   former;   she   soon
  became a proficient。        On the latter head; I extract from her familiar letters
  written home to England at the time; two pleasant pieces of description。
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  A BETROTHAL
  〃We have been to a ball; of which I must give you a description。 Last
  Tuesday we had just done dinner at about seven; and stepped out into the
  balcony to look at the remains of the sunset behind the mountains; when
  we    heard    very   distinctly   a  band    of  music;    which    rather   excited   my
  astonishment; as a solitary organ is the utmost that toils up here。                I went
  out of the room for a few minutes; and; on my returning; Emily said; 'Oh!
  That band is playing at the farmer's near here。               The daughter is fiancee
  to…day; and they have a ball。'        I said; 'I wish I was going!'       'Well;' replied
  she; 'the farmer's wife did call to invite us。'          'Then I shall certainly go;' I
  exclaimed。      I   applied   to   Madame   B。;   who   said   she   would   like   it   very
  much; and we had better go; children and all。             Some of the servants were
  already gone。       We rushed away to put on some shawls; a