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father and son-第15章

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them had been offered to the provincial public before; and the fact that the newly…invented marine aquarium was the fashionable toy of the moment added to their attraction。 My Father was bowed down by sorrow and care; but he was not broken。 His intellectual forces were at their height; and so was his popularity as an author。 The lectures were to begin in march; my Mother was buried on 13 February。 It seemed at first; in the inertia of bereavement; to be all beyond his powers to make the supreme effort; but the wholesome prick of need urged him on。 It was a question of paying for food and clothes; of keeping a roof above our heads。 The captain of a vessel in a storm must navigate his ship; although his wife lies dead in the cabin。 That was my Father's position in the spring of 1857; he had to stimulate; instruct; amuse large audiences of strangers; and seem gay; although affliction and loneliness had settled in his heart。 He had to do this; or starve。

But the difficulty still remained。 During these months what was to become of me? My Father could not take me with him from hotel to hotel and from lecture…hall to lecture…hall。 Nor could he leave me; as people leave the domestic cat; in an empty house for the neighbours to feed at intervals。 The dilemma threatened to be insurmountable; when suddenly there descended upon us a kind; but little…known; paternal cousin from the west of England; who had heard of our calamities。 This lady had a large family of her own at Bristol; she offered to find room in it for me so long as ever my Father should be away in the north; and when my Father; bewildered by so much goodness; hesitated; she came up to London and carried me forcibly away in a whirlwind of good…nature。 Her benevolence was quite spontaneous; and I am not sure that she had not added to it already by helping to nurse our beloved sufferer through part of her illness。 Of that I am not positive; but I recollect very clearly her snatching me from our cold and desolate hearthstone; and carrying me off to her cheerful house at Clifton。

Here; for the first time; when half through my eighth year; I was thrown into the society of young people。 My cousins were none of them; I believe; any longer children; but they were youths and maidens busily engaged in various personal interests; all collected in a hive of wholesome family energy。 Everybody was very kind to me; and I sank back; after the strain of so many months; into mere childhood again。 This long visit to my cousins at Clifton must have been very delightful; I am dimly aware that it was yet I remember but few of its incidents。 My memory; so clear and vivid about earlier solitary times; now in all this society becomes blurred and vague。 I recollect certain pleasures; being taken; for instance; to a menagerie; and having a practical joke; in the worst taste; played upon me by the pelican。 One of my cousins; who was a medical student; showed me a pistol; and helped me to fire it; he smoked a pipe; and I was oddly conscious that both the firearm and the tobacco were definitely hostile to my 'dedication'。 My girl…cousins took turns in putting me to bed; and on cold nights; or when they were in a hurry; allowed me to say my prayer under the bed…clothes instead of kneeling at a chair。 The result of this was further spiritual laxity; because I could not help going to sleep before the prayer was ended。

The visit to Clifton was; in fact; a blessed interval in my strenuous childhood。 It probably prevented my nerves from breaking down under the pressure of the previous months。 The Clifton family was God…fearing; in a quiet; sensible way; but there was a total absence of all the intensity and compulsion of our religious life at Islington。 I was not encouragedI even remember that I was gently snubbedwhen I rattled forth; parrot… fashion; the conventional phraseology of 'the saints'。 For a short; enchanting period of respite; I lived the life of an ordinary little boy; relapsing; to a degree which would have filled my Father with despair; into childish thoughts and childish language。 The result was that of this little happy breathing…space I have nothing to report。 Vague; half…blind remembrances of walks; with my tall cousins waving like trees above me; pleasant noisy evenings in a great room on the ground… floor; faint silver…points of excursions into the country; all this is the very pale and shadowy testimony to a brief interval of healthy; happy child…life; when my hard…driven soul was allowed to have; for a little while; no history。

The life of a child is so brief; its impressions are so illusory and fugitive; that it is as difficult to record its history as it would be to design a morning cloud sailing before the wind。 It is short; as we count shortness in after years; when the drag of lead pulls down to earth the foot that used to flutter with a winged impetuosity; and to float with the pulse of Hermes。 But in memory; my childhood was long; long with interminable hours; hours with the pale cheek pressed against the windowpane; hours of mechanical and repeated lonely 'games'; which had lost their savour; and were kept going by sheer inertness。 Not unhappy; not fretful; but long;long; long。 It seems to me; as I look back to the life in the motherless Islington house; as I resumed it in that slow eighth year of my life; that time had ceased to move。 There was a whole age between one tick of the eight…day clock in the hall; and the next tick。 When the milkman went his rounds in our grey street; with his eldritch scream over the top of each set of area railings; it seemed as though he would never disappear again。 There was no past and no future for me; and the present felt as though it were sealed up in a Leyden jar。 Even my dreams were interminable; and hung stationary from the nightly sky。

At this time; the street was my theatre; and I spent long periods; as I have said; leaning against the window。 I feel now that coldness of the pane; and the feverish heat that was produced; by contrast; in the orbit round the eye。 Now and then amusing things happened。 The onion…man was a joy long waited for。 This worthy was a tall and bony Jersey Protestant with a raucous voice; who strode up our street several times a week; carrying a yoke across his shoulders; from the ends of which hung ropes of onions。 He used to shout; at abrupt intervals; in a tone which might wake the dead:

Here's your rope 。 。 。 。 To hang the Pope 。 。 。 。 And a penn'orth of cheese to choke him。

The cheese appeared to be legendary; he sold only onions。 My Father did not eat onions; but he encouraged this terrible fellow; with his wild eyes and long strips of hair; because of his godly attitude towards the 'Papacy'; and I used to watch him dart out of the front door; present his penny; and retire; graciously waving back the proffered onion。 On the other hand; my Father did not approve of a fat sailor; who was a constant passer…by。 This man; who was probably crazed; used to wall very slowly up the centre of our street; vociferating with the voice of a bull;

Wa…a…atch and pray…hay! Night and day…hay!

This melancholy admonition was the entire business of his life。 He did nothing at all but walk up and down the street
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