第 22 节
作者:扑火      更新:2022-04-08 21:01      字数:9322
  with oak gum; as much as it will bear。 Put on a rag and apply;
  having soaped the place well first。 I have mixed the above with a
  foam of nitre; and it worked well。〃
  Several other receipts follow; ending with: 〃The following is the
  best of all; acting for fallen hairs; when applied with oil or
  pomatum; acts also for falling off of eyelashes or for people
  getting bald all over。 It is wonderful。 Of domestic mice burnt;
  one part; of vine rag burnt; one part; of horse's teeth burnt;
  one part; of bear's grease one; of deer's marrow one; of reed
  bark one。 To be pounded when dry; and mixed with plenty of honey
  til it gets the consistency of honey; then the bear's grease and
  marrow to be mixed (when melted); the medicine to be put in a
  brass flask; and the bald part rubbed til it sprouts。〃
  Concerning these ingredients; my fellow…dramatist; Gilbert
  Murray; who; as a Professor of Greek; has applied to classical
  antiquity the methods of high scholarship (my own method is pure
  divination); writes to me as follows: 〃 Some of this I don't
  understand; and possibly Galen did not; as he quotes your
  heroine's own language。 Foam of nitre is; I think; something like
  soapsuds。 Reed bark is an odd expression。 It might mean the
  outside membrane of a reed: I do not know what it ought to be
  called。 In the burnt mice receipt I take that you first mixed the
  solid powders with honey; and then added the grease。 I expect
  Cleopatra preferred it because in most of the others you have to
  lacerate the skin; prick it; or rub it till it bleeds。 I do not
  know what vine rag is。 I translate literally。〃
  APPARENT ANACHRONISMS
  The only way to write a play which shall convey to the general
  public an impression of antiquity is to make the characters speak
  blank verse and abstain from reference to steam; telegraphy; or
  any of the material conditions of their existence。 The more
  ignorant men are; the more convinced are they that their little
  parish and their little chapel is an apex which civilization and
  philosophy have painfully struggled up the pyramid of time from a
  desert of savagery。 Savagery; they think; became barbarism;
  barbarism became ancient civilization; ancient civilization
  became Pauline Christianity; Pauline Christianity became Roman
  Catholicism; Roman Catholicism became the Dark Ages; and the Dark
  Ages were finally enlightened by the Protestant instincts of the
  English race。 The whole process is summed up as Progress with a
  capital P。 And any elderly gentleman of Progressive temperament
  will testify that the improvement since he was a boy is enormous。
  Now if we count the generations of Progressive elderly gentlemen
  since; say; Plato; and add together the successive enormous
  improvements to which each of them has testified; it will strike
  us at once as an unaccountable fact that the world; instead of
  having been improved in 67 generations out all recognition;
  presents; on the whole; a rather less dignified appearance in
  Ibsen's Enemy of the People than in Plato's Republic。 And in
  truth; the period of time covered by history is far too short to
  allow of any perceptible progress in the popular sense of
  Evolution of the Human Species。 The notion that there has been
  any such Progress since Caesar's time (less than 20 centuries) is
  too absurd for discussion。 All the savagery; barbarism; dark ages
  and the rest of it of which we have any record as existing in the
  past; exists at the present moment。 A British carpenter or
  stonemason may point out that he gets twice as much money for his
  labor as his father did in the same trade; and that his suburban
  house; with its bath; its cottage piano; its drawingroom suite;
  and its album of photographs; would have shamed the plainness of
  his grandmother's。 But the descendants of feudal barons; living
  in squalid lodgings on a salary of fifteen shillings a week
  instead of in castles on princely revenues; do not congratulate
  the world on the change。 Such changes; in fact; are not to the
  point。 It has been known; as far back as our records go; that man
  running wild in the woods is different to man kennelled in a city
  slum; that a dog seems to understand a shepherd better than a
  hewer of wood and drawer of water can understand an astronomer;
  and that breeding; gentle nurture and luxurious food and shelter
  will produce a kind of man with whom the common laborer is
  socially incompatible。 The same thing is true of horses and dogs。
  Now there is  clearly room for great changes in the world by
  increasing the percentage of individuals who are carefully bred
  and gently nurtured even to finally making the most of every man
  and woman born。 But that possibility existed in the days of the
  Hittites as much as it does to…day。 It does not give the
  slightest real support to the common assumption that the
  civilized contemporaries of the Hittites were unlike their
  civilized descendants to…day。
  This would appear the truest commonplace if it were not that the
  ordinary citizen's ignorance of the past combines with his
  idealization of the present to mislead and flatter him。 Our
  latest book on the new railway across Asia describes the dulness
  of the Siberian farmer and the vulgar pursepride of the Siberian
  man of business without the least consciousness that the sting of
  contemptuous instances given might have been saved by writing
  simply 〃Farmers and provincial plutocrats in Siberia are exactly
  what they are in England。〃 The latest professor descanting on the
  civilization of the Western Empire in the fifth century feels
  bound to assume; in the teeth of his own researches; that the
  Christian was one sort of animal and the Pagan another。 It might
  as well be assumed; as indeed it generally is assumed by
  implication; that a murder committed with a poisoned arrow is
  different to a murder committed with a Mauser rifle。 All such
  notions are illusions。 Go back to the first syllable of recorded
  time; and there you will find your Christian and your Pagan; your
  yokel and your poet; helot and hero; Don Quixote and Sancho;
  Tamino and Papageno; Newton and bushman unable to count eleven;
  all alive and contemporaneous; and all convinced that they are
  heirs of all the ages and the privileged recipients of THE truth
  (all others damnable heresies); just as you have them to…day;
  flourishing in countries each of which is the bravest and best
  that ever sprang at Heaven's command from out of the azure main。
  Again; there is the illusion of 〃increased command over Nature;〃
  meaning that cotton is cheap and that ten miles of country road
  on a bicycle have replaced four on foot。 But even if man's
  increased command over Nature included any increased command over
  himself (the only sort of command relevant to his evolution into
  a higher being); the fact remains that it is only by running away
  from the increased command over Nature to country places where
  Nature is still in primitive command over Man that he can recover
  from the effects of the smoke; the stench; the foul air; the
  overcrowding; the racket; the ugliness; the dirt which the cheap
  cotton costs us。 If manufacturing activity means Progress; the
  town must be more advanced than the country; and the field
  laborers and village artizans of to…day must be much less changed
  from the servants of Job than the proletariat of modern London
  from the proletariat of Caesar's Rome。 Yet the cockney
  proletarian is so inferior to the village laborer that it is only
  by steady recruiting from the country that London is kept alive。
  This does not seem as if the change since Job's time were
  Progress in the popular sense: quite the reverse。 The common
  stock of discoveries in physics has accumulated a little: that is
  all。
  One more illustration。 Is the Englishman prepared to admit that
  the American is his superior as a human being? I ask this
  question because the scarcity of labor in America relatively to
  the demand for it has led to a development of machinery there;
  and a consequent 〃increase of command over Nature〃 which makes
  many of our English methods appear almost medieval to the
  up…to…date Chicagoan。 This means that the American has an
  advantage over the Englishman of exactly the same nature that the
  Englishman has over the contemporaries of Cicero。 Is the
  Englishman prepared to draw the same conclusion in both cases? I
  think not。 The American; of course; will draw it cheerfully; but
  I must then ask him whether; since a modern negro has a greater
  〃command over Nature〃 than Washington had; we are also to accept
  the conclusion; involved in his former one; that humanity has
  progressed from Washington to the fin de siecle negro。
  Finally; I would point out that if life is crowned by its success
  and devotion in industrial organization and ingenuity; we had
  better worship the ant and the bee (as moralists urge us to do in
  our childhood); and humble ourselves before the arrogance of the
  birds of Aristophanes。
  My reason then for ignoring the popular conception of Progress in
  Caesar and Cleopatra is that there is no reason to suppose that
  any Progress has taken place since their time。 But even if I
  shared the popular delusion; I do not see that I could have made
  any essential difference in the play