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autobiography and selected essays-第4章

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more。〃  And again he writes in a more hopeful strain; 〃With fresh

air and exercise and careful avoidance of cold and night air I am

to be all right again。〃  He then adds: 〃I am not fond of coddling;

but as Paddy gave his pig the best corner in his cabinbecause

'shure; he paid the rint'I feel bound to take care of myself as a

household animal of value; to say nothing of other points。〃



Although he was never strong after this long illness; Huxley began

in 1889 to be much better。  The first sign of returning vigor was

the eagerness with which he entered into a controversy with

Gladstone。  Huxley had always enjoyed a mental battle; and some of

his fiercest tilts were with Gladstone。  He even found the cause of

better health in this controversy; and was grateful to the 〃Grand

Old Man〃 for making home happy for him。  From this time to his

death; Huxley wrote a number of articles on politics; science; and

religion; many of which were published in the volume called

Controverted Questions。  The main value of these essays lies in the

fact that Huxley calls upon men to give clear reasons for the faith

which they claim as theirs; and makes; as a friend wrote of him;

hazy thinking and slovenly; half…formed conclusions seem the base

thing they really are。



The last years of Huxley's life were indeed the longed…for Indian

summer。  Away from the noise of London at Eastbourne by the sea; he

spent many happy hours with old…time friends and in his garden;

which was a great joy to him。  His large family of sons and

daughters and grandchildren brought much cheer to his last days。

Almost to the end he was working and writing for publication。

Three days before his death he wrote to his old friend; Hooker;

that he didn't feel at all like 〃sending in his checks〃 and hoped

to recover。  He died very quietly on June 29; 1895。  That he met

death with the same calm faith and strength with which he had met

life is indicated by the lines which his wife wrote and which he

requested to be his epitaph:





Be not afraid; ye waiting hearts that weep;

For still He giveth His beloved sleep;

And if an endless sleep He wills; so best。





To attempt an analysis of Huxley's character; unique and bafflingly

complex as it is; is beyond the scope of this sketch; but to give

only the mere facts of his life is to do an injustice to the vivid

personality of the man as it is revealed in his letters。  All his

human interest in people and thingspets; and flowers; and family…

…brightens many pages of the two ponderous volumes。  Now one reads

of his grief over some backward…going plant; or over some garden

tragedy; as 〃A lovely clematis in full flower; which I had spent

hours in nailing up; has just died suddenly。  I am more

inconsolable than Jonah!〃  Now one is amused with a nonsense letter

to one of his children; and again with an account of a pet。  〃I

wish you would write seriously to M。  She is not behaving well

to Oliver。  I have seen handsomer kittens; but few more lively; and

energetically destructive。  Just now he scratched away at something

M says cost 13s。 6d。 a yard and reduced more or less of it to

combings。  M therefore excludes him from the dining…room and

all those opportunities of higher education which he would have in

MY house。〃  Frequently one finds a description of some event; so

vividly done that the mere reading of it seems like a real

experience。  An account of Tennyson's burial in Westminster is a

typical bit of description:





Bright sunshine streamed through the windows of the nave; while the

choir was in half gloom; and as each shaft of light illuminated the

flower…covered bier as it slowly travelled on; one thought of the

bright succession of his works between the darkness before and the

darkness after。  I am glad to say that the Royal Society was

represented by four of its chief officers; and nine of the

commonalty; including myself。  Tennyson has a right to that; as the

first poet since Lucretius who has understood the drift of science。





No parts of the Life and Letters are more enjoyable than those

concerning the 〃Happy Family;〃 as a friend of Huxley's names his

household。  His family of seven children found their father a most

engaging friend and companion。  He could tell them wonderful sea

stories and animal stories and could draw fascinating pictures。

His son writes of how when he was ill with scarlet fever he used to

look forward to his father's home…coming。  〃The solitary daysfor

I was the first victim in the familywere very long; and I looked

forward with intense interest to one half…hour after dinner; when

he would come up and draw scenes from the history of a remarkable

bull…terrier and his family that went to the seaside in a most

human and child…delighting manner。  I have seldom suffered a

greater disappointment than when; one evening; I fell asleep just

before this fairy half…hour; and lost it out of my life。〃



The account of the comradeship between Huxley and his wife reads

like a good old…time romance。  He was attracted to her at first by

her 〃simplicity and directness united with an unusual degree of

cultivation;〃 Huxley's son writes。  On her he depended for advice

in his work; and for companionship at home and abroad when

wandering in search of health in Italy and Switzerland。  When he

had been separated from her for some time; he wrote; 〃Nobody;

children or anyone else; can be to me what you are。  Ulysses

preferred his old woman to immortality; and this absence has led me

to see that he was as wise in that as in other things。〃  Again he

writes; 〃Against all trouble (and I have had my share) I weigh a

wife…comrade 'trew and fest' in all emergencies。〃



The letters also give one a clear idea of the breadth of Huxley's

interests; particularly of his appreciation of the various forms of

art。  Huxley believed strongly in the arts as a refining and

helpful influence in education。  He keenly enjoyed good music。

Professor Hewes writes of him that one breaking in upon him in the

afternoon at South Kensington would not infrequently be met 〃with a

snatch of some melody of Bach's fugue。〃  He also liked good

pictures; and always had among his friends well…known artists; as

Alma…Tadema; Sir Frederick Leighton; and Burne…Jones。  He read

poetry widely; and strongly advocated the teaching of poetry in

English schools。  As to poetry; his own preferences are

interesting。  Wordsworth he considered too discursive; Shelley was

too diffuse; Keats; he liked for pure beauty; Browning for

strength; and Tennyson for his understanding of modern science; but

most frequently of all he read Milton and Shakespeare。



As to Huxley's appearance; and as to the impression which his

personality made upon others; the description of a friend; Mr。 G。

W。 Smalley; presents him with striking force。  〃The square

forehead; the square jaw; the tense lines of the mouth; the deep

flashing dark eyes; the impression of something 
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