友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
飞读中文网 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

robert louis stevenson-第26章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



。〃  In fact; he might very well from another side; have taken  one of Goethe's fine sayings as a motto for himself:


〃Greatest saints were ever most kindly…hearted to sinners; Here I'm a saint with the best; sinners I never could hate。〃 (7)


Stevenson's own verdict on DEACON BRODIE given to a NEW YORK HERALD  reporter on the author's arrival in New York in September 1887; on  the LUDGATE HILL; is thus very near the precise truth:  〃The piece  has been all overhauled; and though I have no idea whether it will  please an audience; I don't think either Mr Henley or I are ashamed  of it。  BUT WE WERE BOTH YOUNG MEN WHEN WE DID THAT; AND I THINK WE  HAD AN IDEA THAT BAD…HEARTEDNESS WAS STRENGTH。〃

If Mr Henley in any way confirmed R。 L。 Stevenson in this  perversion; as I much fear he did; no true admirer of Stevenson has  much to thank him for; whatever claims he may have fancied he had  to Stevenson's eternal gratitude。  He did Stevenson about the very  worst turn he could have done; and aided and abetted in robbing us  and the world of yet greater works than we have had from his hands。   He was but condemning himself when he wrote some of the detractory  things he did in the PALL MALL MAGAZINE about the EDINBURGH  EDITION; etc。  Men are mirrors in which they see each other:   Henley; after all; painted himself much more effectively in that  now notorious PALL MALL MAGAZINE article than he did R。 L。  Stevenson。  Such is the penalty men too often pay for wreaking  paltry revenges … writing under morbid memories and narrow and  petty grievances … they not only fail in truth and impartiality;  but inscribe a kind of grotesque parody of themselves in their  effort to make their subject ridiculous; as he did; for example;  about the name Lewis=Louis; and various other things。

R。 L。 Stevenson's fate was to be a casuistic and mystic moralist at  bottom; and could not help it; while; owing to some kink or twist;  due; perhaps; mainly to his earlier sufferings; and the teachings  he then received; he could not help giving it always a turn to what  he himself called 〃tail…foremost〃 or inverted morality; and it was  not till near the close that he fully awakened to the fact that  here he was false to the truest canons at once of morality and life  and art; and that if he pursued this course his doom was; and would  be; to make his endings 〃disgrace; or perhaps; degrade his  beginnings;〃 and that no true and effective dramatic unity and  effect and climax was to be gained。  Pity that he did so much on  this perverted view of life and world and art:  and well it is that  he came to perceive it; even though almost too late:… certainly too  late for that full presentment of that awful yet gladdening  presence of a God's power and equity in this seeming tangled web of  a world; the idea which inspired Robert Browning as well as  Wordsworth; when he wrote; and gathered it up into a few lines in  PIPPA PASSES:


〃The year's at the spring; And day's at the morn; Morning's at seven; The hillsides dew…pearled;

The lark's on the wing; The snail's on the thorn: God's in His heaven; All's right with the world。

。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。 。

〃All service ranks the same with God; If now; as formerly he trod Paradise; His presence fills Our earth; each only as God wills Can work … God's puppets best and worst; Are we; there is no last or first。〃


It shows what he might have accomplished; had longer life been but  allowed him。



CHAPTER XVI … STEVENSON'S GLOOM



THE problem of Stevenson's gloom cannot be solved by any  commonplace cut…and…dried process。  It will remain a problem only  unless (1) his original dreamy tendency crossed; if not warped; by  the fatalistic Calvinism which was drummed into him by father;  mother; and nurse in his tender years; is taken fully into account;  then (2) the peculiar action on such a nature of the unsatisfying  and; on the whole; distracting effect of the bohemian and hail… fellow…well…met sort of ideal to which he yielded; and which has to  be charged with much; and (3) the conflict in him of a keenly  social animus with a very strong egotistical effusiveness; fed by  fancy; and nourished by the enforced solitariness inevitable in the  case of one who; from early years up; suffered from painful; and  even crushing; disease。

His text and his sermon … which may be shortly summed in the  following sentence … be kind; for in kindness to others lies the  only true pleasure to be gained in life; be cheerful; even to the  point of egotistic self…satisfaction; for through cheerfulness only  is the flow of this incessant kindliness of thought and service  possible。  He was not in harmony with the actual effect of much of  his creative work; though he illustrated this in his life; as few  men have done。  He regarded it as the highest duty of life to give  pleasure to others; his art in his own idea thus became in an  unostentatious way consecrated; and while he would not have claimed  to be a seer; any more than he would have claimed to be a saint; as  he would have held in contempt a mere sybarite; most certainly a  vein of unblamable hedonism pervaded his whole philosophy of life。   Suffering constantly; he still was always kindly。  He encouraged;  as Mr Gosse has said; this philosophy by every resource open to  him。  In practical life; all who knew him declared that he was  brightness; naive fancy; and sunshine personified; and yet he could  not help always; somehow; infusing into his fiction a pronounced;  and sometimes almost fatal; element of gloom。  Even in his own case  they were not pleasure…giving and failed thus in essence。  Some  wise critic has said that no man can ever write well creatively of  that in which in his early youth he had no knowledge。  Always  behind Stevenson's latest exercises lies the shadow of this as an  unshifting background; which by art may be relieved; but never  refined away wholly。  He cannot escape from it if he would。  Here;  too; as George MacDonald has neatly and nicely said:  We are the  victims of our own past; and often a hand is put forth upon us from  behind and draws us into life backward。  Here was Stevenson; with  his half…hedonistic theories of life; the duty of giving pleasure;  of making eyes brighter; and casting sunshine around one wherever  one went; yet the creator of gloom for us; when all the world was  before him where to choose。  This fateful shadow pursued him to the  end; often giving us; as it were; the very justificative ground for  his own father's despondency and gloom; which the son rather too  decisively reproved; while he might have sympathised with it in a  stranger; and in that most characteristic letter to his mother;  which we have quoted; said that it made his father often seem; to  him; to be ungrateful … 〃HAS THE MAN NO GRATITUDE?〃  Two selves  thus persistently and constantly struggled in Stevenson。  He was  from this point of view; indeed; his own Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde; the  buoyant; self…enjoying; because pleasure…conferring; man; and at  the same time the helpless yet fascinating 〃dark interpreter〃 of  the gloomy and gloom…inspiring side of life; viewed from the point  of view of dominating character and inherited influ
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!