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father and son-第52章

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s it is called。 I believe he said that the banking business; wisely and honourably conducted; sometimes led; as we know that it is apt to lead; to affluence。 To my horror; my Father; with rising emphasis; replied that 'if there were offered to his beloved child what is called 〃an opening〃 that would lead to an income of £10;000 a year; and that would divert his thoughts and interest from the Lord's work he would reject it on his child's behalf。' Mr。 Brightwen; a precise and polished gentleman who evidently never made an exaggerated statement in his life; was; I think; faintly scandalized; he soon left us; and I do not recollect his paying us a second visit。

For my silent part; I felt very much like Gehazi; and I would fain have followed after the banker if I had dared to do so; into the night。 I would have excused to him the ardour of my Elisha; and I would have reminded him of the sons of the prophets'Give me; I pray thee;' I would have said; 'a talent of silver and two changes of garments。' It seemed to me very hard that my Father should dispose of my possibilities of wealth in so summary a fashion; but the fact that I did resent it; and regretted what I supposed to be my 'chance'; shows how far apart we had already swung。 My Father; I am convinced; thought that he gave words to my inward instincts when he repudiated the very mild and inconclusive benevolence of his brother…in…law。 But he certainly did not do so。 I was conscious of a sharp and instinctive disappointment at having had; as I fancied; wealth so near my grasp; and at seeing it all cast violently into the sea of my Father's scruples。

Not one of my village friends attended the boarding…school to which I was now attached; and I arrived there without an acquaintance。 I should soon; however; have found a corner of my own if my Father had not unluckily stipulated that I was not to sleep in the dormitory with the boys of my own age; but in the room occupied by the two elder sons of a prominent Plymouth Brother whom he knew。 From asocial point of view this was an unfortunate arrangement; since these youths were some years older and many years riper than I; the eldest; in fact; was soon to leave; they had enjoyed their independence; and they now greatly resented being saddled with the presence of an unknown urchin。 The supposition had been that they would protect and foster my religious practices; would encourage me; indeed; as my Father put it; to approach the Throne of Grace with them at morning and evening prayer。 They made no pretence; however; to be considered godly; they looked upon me as an intruder; and after a while the younger; and ruder; of them openly let me know that they believed I had been put into their room to 'spy upon' them; it had been a plot; they knew; between their father and mine: and he darkly warned me that I should suffer if 'anything got out'。 I had; however; no wish to trouble them; nor any faint interest in their affairs。 I soon discovered that they were absorbed in a silly kind of amorous correspondence with the girls of a neighbouring academy; but 'what were all such toys to me?'

These young fellows; who ought long before to have left the school; did nothing overtly unkind to me; but they condemned me to silence。 They ceased to address me except with an occasional command。 By reason of my youth; I was in bed and asleep before my companions arrived upstairs; and in the morning I was always routed up and packed about my business while they still were drowsing。 But the fact that I had been cut off from my coevals by night; cut me off from them also by dayso that I was nothing to them; neither a boarder nor a day…scholar; neither flesh; fish nor fowl。 The loneliness of my life was extreme; and that I always went home on Saturday afternoon and returned on Monday morning still further checked my companionships at school。 For a long time; round the outskirts of that busy throng of opening lives; I 'wandered lonely as a cloud'; and sometimes I was more unhappy than I had ever been before。 No one; however; bullied me; and though I was dimly and indefinably witness to acts of uncleanness and cruelty; I was the victim of no such acts and the recipient of no dangerous confidences。 I suppose that my queer reputation for sanctity; half dreadful; half ridiculous; surrounded me with a non…conducting atmosphere。

We are the victims of hallowed proverbs; and one of the most classic of these tells us that 'the child is father of the man'。 But in my case I cannot think that this was true。 In mature years I have always been gregarious; a lover of my kind; dependent upon the company of friends for the very pulse of moral life。 To be marooned; to be shut up in a solitary cell; to inhabit a lighthouse; or to camp alone in a forest; these have always seemed to me afflictions too heavy to be borne; even in imagination。 A state in which conversation exists not; is for me an air too empty of oxygen for my lungs to breathe it。

Yet when I look back upon my days at boarding…school; I see myself unattracted by any of the human beings around me。 My grown…up years are made luminous to me in memory by the ardent faces of my friends; but I can scarce recall so much as the names of more than two or three of my schoolfellows。 There is not one of them whose mind or whose character made any lasting impression upon me。 In later life; I have been impatient of solitude; and afraid of it; at school; I asked for no more than to slip out of the hurly…burly and be alone with my reflections and my fancies。 That magnetism of humanity which has been the agony of mature years; of this I had not a trace when I was a boy。 Of those fragile loves to which most men look back with tenderness and passion; emotions to be explained only as Montaigne explained them; parceque c'etait lui; parceque c'etait moi; I knew nothing。 I; to whom friendship has since been like sunlight and like sleep; left school unbrightened and unrefreshed by commerce with a single friend。

If I had been clever; I should doubtless have attracted the jealousy of my fellows; but I was spared this by the mediocrity of my success in the classes。 One little fact I may mention; because it exemplifies the advance in observation which has been made in forty years。 I was extremely nearsighted; and in consequence was placed at a gross disadvantage; by being unable to see the slate or the black…board on which our tasks were explained。 It seems almost incredible; when one reflects upon it; but during the whole of my school life; this fact was never commented upon or taken into account by a single person; until the Polish lady who taught us the elements of German and French drew someone's attention to it in my sixteenth year。 I was not quick; but I passed for being denser than I was because of the myopic haze that enveloped me。 But this is not an autobiography; and with the cold and shrouded details of my uninteresting school life I will not fatigue the reader。

I was not content; however; to be the cipher that I found myself; and when I had been at school for about a year; I 'broke out'; greatly; I think; to my own surprise; in a popular act。 We had a young usher whom we disliked。 I suppose; poor half…starved phthisic lad
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