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the letters-2-第2章

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imagination; or may not。  If it does; I shall owe it to you; and 

the thing will thus descend from Keats even if on the wrong side of 

the blanket。  If it can be done in prose … that is the puzzle … I 

divagate again。  Thank you again:  you can draw and yet you do not 

love the ugly:  what are you doing in this age?  Flee; while it is 

yet time; they will have your four limbs pinned upon a stable door 

to scare witches。  The ugly; my unhappy friend; is DE RIGUEUR:  it 

is the only wear!  What a chance you threw away with the serpent!  

Why had Apollonius no pimples?  Heavens; my dear Low; you do not 

know your business。。。。



I send you herewith a Gothic gnome for your Greek nymph; but the 

gnome is interesting; I think; and he came out of a deep mine; 

where he guards the fountain of tears。  It is not always the time 

to rejoice。 … Yours ever;



R。 L。 S。



The gnome's name is JEKYLL & HYDE; I believe you will find he is 

likewise quite willing to answer to the name of Low or Stevenson。



SAME DAY。 … I have copied out on the other sheet some bad verses; 

which somehow your picture suggested; as a kind of image of things 

that I pursue and cannot reach; and that you seem … no; not to have 

reached … but to have come a thought nearer to than I。  This is the 

life we have chosen:  well; the choice was mad; but I should make 

it again。



What occurs to me is this:  perhaps they might be printed in (say) 

the CENTURY for the sake of my name; and if that were possible; 

they might advertise your book。  It might be headed as sent in 

acknowledgment of your LAMIA。  Or perhaps it might be introduced by 

the phrases I have marked above。  I dare say they would stick it 

in:  I want no payment; being well paid by LAMIA。  If they are not; 

keep them to yourself。





TO WILL H。 LOW





DAMNED BAD LINES IN RETURN FOR A BEAUTIFUL BOOK



Youth now flees on feathered foot。

Faint and fainter sounds the flute;

Rarer songs of Gods。

And still;

Somewhere on the sunny hill;

Or along the winding stream;

Through the willows; flits a dream;

Flits; but shows a smiling face;

Flees; but with so quaint a grace;

None can choose to stay at home;

All must follow … all must roam。

This is unborn beauty:  she

Now in air floats high and free;

Takes the sun; and breaks the blue; …

Late; with stooping pinion flew

Raking hedgerow trees; and wet

Her wing in silver streams; and set

Shining foot on temple roof。

Now again she flies aloof;

Coasting mountain clouds; and kissed

By the evening's amethyst。

In wet wood and miry lane

Still we pound and pant in vain;

Still with earthy foot we chase

Waning pinion; fainting face;

Still; with grey hair; we stumble on

Till … behold! … the vision gone!

Where has fleeting beauty led?

To the doorway of the dead!

qy。 omit? 'Life is gone; but life was gay:

We have come the primrose way!'



R。 L。 S。







Letter:  TO EDMUND GOSSE







SKERRYVORE; BOURNEMOUTH; JAN。 2ND; 1886。



MY DEAR GOSSE; … Thank you for your letter; so interesting to my 

vanity。  There is a review in the St。 James's; which; as it seems 

to hold somewhat of your opinions; and is besides written with a 

pen and not a poker; we think may possibly be yours。  The PRINCE 

has done fairly well in spite of the reviews; which have been bad:  

he was; as you doubtless saw; well slated in the SATURDAY; one 

paper received it as a child's story; another (picture my agony) 

described it as a 'Gilbert comedy。'  It was amusing to see the race 

between me and Justin M'Carthy:  the Milesian has won by a length。



That is the hard part of literature。  You aim high; and you take 

longer over your work; and it will not be so successful as if you 

had aimed low and rushed it。  What the public likes is work (of any 

kind) a little loosely executed; so long as it is a little wordy; a 

little slack; a little dim and knotless; the dear public likes it; 

it should (if possible) be a little dull into the bargain。  I know 

that good work sometimes hits; but; with my hand on my heart; I 

think it is by an accident。  And I know also that good work must 

succeed at last; but that is not the doing of the public; they are 

only shamed into silence or affectation。  I do not write for the 

public; I do write for money; a nobler deity; and most of all for 

myself; not perhaps any more noble; but both more intelligent and 

nearer home。



Let us tell each other sad stories of the bestiality of the beast 

whom we feed。  What he likes is the newspaper; and to me the press 

is the mouth of a sewer; where lying is professed as from an 

university chair; and everything prurient; and ignoble; and 

essentially dull; finds its abode and pulpit。  I do not like 

mankind; but men; and not all of these … and fewer women。  As for 

respecting the race; and; above all; that fatuous rabble of 

burgesses called 'the public;' God save me from such irreligion! … 

that way lies disgrace and dishonour。  There must be something 

wrong in me; or I would not be popular。



This is perhaps a trifle stronger than my sedate and permanent 

opinion。  Not much; I think。  As for the art that we practise; I 

have never been able to see why its professors should be respected。  

They chose the primrose path; when they found it was not all 

primroses; but some of it brambly; and much of it uphill; they 

began to think and to speak of themselves as holy martyrs。  But a 

man is never martyred in any honest sense in the pursuit of his 

pleasure; and DELIRIUM TREMENS has more of the honour of the cross。  

We were full of the pride of life; and chose; like prostitutes; to 

live by a pleasure。  We should be paid if we give the pleasure we 

pretend to give; but why should we be honoured?



I hope some day you and Mrs。 Gosse will come for a Sunday; but we 

must wait till I am able to see people。  I am very full of Jenkin's 

life; it is painful; yet very pleasant; to dig into the past of a 

dead friend; and find him; at every spadeful; shine brighter。  I 

own; as I read; I wonder more and more why he should have taken me 

to be a friend。  He had many and obvious faults upon the face of 

him; the heart was pure gold。  I feel it little pain to have lost 

him; for it is a loss in which I cannot believe; I take it; against 

reason; for an absence; if not to…day; then to…morrow; I still 

fancy I shall see him in the door; and then; now when I know him 

better; how glad a meeting!  Yes; if I could believe in the 

immortality business; the world would indeed be too good to be 

true; but we were put here to do what service we can; for honour 

and not for hire:  the sods cover us; and the worm that never dies; 

the conscience; sleeps well at last; these are the wages; besides 

what we receive so lavishly day by day; and they are enough for a 

man who knows his own frailty and sees all things in the proportion 

of reality。  The soul of piety was k
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