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双语·书屋环游记 第十二章

所属教程:译林版·书屋环游记

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2022年05月16日

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XII

Here we are at the final séance.For the last time,my patient comrade,I ask you to make yourself comfortable upon the old green settee,to look up at the oaken shelves,and to bear with me as best you may while I preach about their contents.The last time!And yet,as I look along the lines of the volumes,I have not mentioned one out of ten of those to which I owe a debt of gratitude,nor one in a hundred of the thoughts which course through my brain as I look at them.As well perhaps,for the man who has said all that he has to say has invariably said too much.

Let me be didactic for a moment!I assume this solemn—oh,call it not pedantic!—attitude because my eye catches the small but select corner which constitues my library of Science.I wanted to say that if I were advising a young man who was beginning life,I should counsel him to devote one evening a week to scientific reading.Had he the perseverance to adhere to his resolution,and if he began it at twenty,he would certainly find himself with an unusually well-furnished mind at thirty,which would stand him in right good stead in whatever line of life he might walk.When I advise him to read science,I do not mean that he should choke himself with the dust of the pedants,and lose himself in the subdivisions of the Lepidoptera,or the classifications of the dicotyledonous plants.These dreary details are the prickly bushes in that enchanted garden,and you are foolish indeed if you begin your walks by butting your head into one.Keep very clear of them until you have explored the open beds and wandered down every easy path.For this reason avoid the text-books,which repel,and cultivate that popular science which attracts.You cannot hope to be a specialist upon all these varied subjects.Better far to have a broad idea of general results,and to understand their relations to each other.A very little reading will give a man such a knowledge of geology,for example,as will make every quarry and railway cutting an object of interest.A very little zoology will enable you to satisfy your curiosity as to what is the proper name and style of this buff-ermine moth which at the present instant is buzzing round the lamp.A very little botany will enable you to recognize every flower you are likely to meet in your walks abroad,and to give you a tiny thrill of interest when you chance upon one which is beyond your ken.A very little archaeology will tell you all about yonder British tumulus,or help you to fill in the outline of the broken Roman camp upon the downs.A very little astronomy will cause you to look more intently at the heavens,to pick out your brothers the planets,who move in your own circles,from the stranger stars,and to appreciate the order,beauty,and majesty of that material universe which is most surely the outward sign of the spiritual force behind it.How a man of science can be a materialist is as amazing to me as how a sectarian can limit the possibilities of the Creator.Show me a picture without an artist,show me a bust without a sculptor,show me music without a musician,and then you may begin to talk to me of a universe without a Universe-maker,call Him by what name you will.

Here is Flammarion's“L'Atmosphère”—a very gorgeous though weather-stained copy in faded scarlet and gold.The book has a small history,and I value it.A young Frenchman,dying of fever on the west coast of Africa,gave it to me as a professional fee.The sight of it takes me back to a little ship’s bunk,and a sallow face with large,sad eyes looking out at me.Poor boy,I fear that he never saw his beloved Marseilles again!

Talking of popular science,I know no better books for exciting a man's first interest,and giving a broad general view of the subject,than these of Samuel Laing.Who would have imagined that the wise savant and gentle dreamer of these volumes was also the energetic secretary of a railway company?Many men of the highest scientific eminence have begun in prosaic lines of life.Herbert Spencer was a railway engineer.Wallace was a land surveyor.But that a man with so pronounced a scientific brain as Laing should continue all his life to devote his time to dull routine work,remaining in harness until extreme old age,with his soul still open to every fresh idea,and his brain acquiring new concretions of knowledge,is indeed a remarkable fact.Read those books,and you will be a fuller man.

It is an excellent device to talk about what you have recently read.Rather hard upon your audience,you may say;but without wishing to be personal,I dare bet it is more interesting than your usual small talk.It must,of course,be done with some tact and discretion.It is the mention of Laing's works which awoke the train of thought which led to these remarks.I had met some one at a table d'h?te or elsewhere who made some remark about the prehistoric remains in the valley of the Somme.I knew all about those,and showed him that I did.I then threw out some allusion to the rock temples of Yucatan,which he instantly picked up and enlarged upon.He spoke of ancient Peruvian civilization,and I kept well abreast of him.I cited the Titicaca image,and he knew all about that.He spoke of Quarternary man,and I was with him all the time.Each was more and more amazed at the fulness and the accuracy of the information of the other,until like a flash the explanation crossed my mind.“You are reading Samuel Laing’s‘Human Origins’!”I cried.So he was,and so by a coincidence was I.We were pouring water over each other,but it was all new-drawn from the spring.

There is a big two-volumed book at the end of my science shelf which would,even now,have its right to be called scientific disputed by some of the pedants.It is Myers'“Human Personality.”My own opinion,for what it is worth,is that it will be recognized a century hence as a great root book,one from which a whole new branch of science will have sprung.Where between four covers will you find greater evidence of patience,of industry,of thought,of discrimination,of that sweep of mind which can gather up a thousand separate facts and bind them all in the meshes of a single consistent system?Darwin has not been a more ardent collector in zoology than Myers in the dim regions of psychic research,and his whole hypothesis,so new that a new nomenclature and terminology had to be invented to express it,telepathy,the subliminal,and the rest of it,will always be a monument of acute reasoning expressed in fine prose,and founded upon ascertained fact.

The mere suspicion of scientific thought or scientific methods has a great charm in any branch of literature,however far it may be removed from actual research.Poe's tales,for example,owe much to this effect,though in his case it was a pure illusion.Jules Verne also produces a charmingly credible effect for the most incredible things by an adept use of a considerable amount of real knowledge of nature.But most gracefully of all does it shine in the lighter form of essay,where playful thoughts draw their analogies and illustrations from actual fact,each showing up the other,and the combination presenting a peculiar piquancy to the reader.

Where could I get a better illustration of what I mean than in those three little volumes which make up Wendell Holmes'immortal series,“The Autocrat,”“The Poet,”and“The Professor at the Breakfast Table”?Here the subtle,dainty,delicate thought is continually reinforced by the allusion or the analogy which shows the wide,accurate knowledge behind it.What work it is,how wise,how witty,how large-hearted and tolerant!Could one choose one's philosopher in the Elysian fields,as once in Athens,I would surely join the smiling group who listened to the human,kindly words of the Sage of Boston.I suppose it is just that continual leaven of science,especially of medical science,which has from my early student days given those books so strong an attraction for me.Never have I so known and loved a man whom I had never seen.It was one of the ambitions of my lifetime to look upon his face,but by the irony of Fate I arrived in his native city just in time to lay a wreath upon his newly-turned grave.Read his books again,and see if you are not especially struck by the up-to-dateness of them.Like Tennyson's“In Memoriam”it seems to me to be work which sprang into full flower fifty years before its time.One can hardly open a page haphazard without lighting upon some passage which illustrates the breadth of view,the felicity of phrase,and the singular power of playful but most suggestive analogy.Here,for example,is a paragraph—no better than a dozen others—which combines all the rare qualities—

Insanity is often the logic of an accurate mind overtasked.Good mental machinery ought to break its own wheels and levers,if anything is thrust upon them suddenly which tends to stop them or reverse their motion.A weak mind does not accumulate force enough to hurt itself;stupidity often saves a man from going mad.We frequently see persons in insane hospitals,sent there in consequence of what are called religious mental disturbances.I confess that I think better of them than of many who hold the same notions,and keep their wits and enjoy life very well,outside of the asylums.Any decent person ought to go mad if he really holds such and such opinions…….Anything that is brutal,cruel,heathenish,that makes life hopeless for the most of mankind,and perhaps for entire races—anything that assumes the necessity for the extermination of instincts which were given to be regulated—no matter by what name you call it—no matter whether a fakir,or a monk,or a deacon believes it—if received,ought to produce insanity in every well-regulated mind.

There's a fine bit of breezy polemics for the dreary fifties—a fine bit of moral courage too for the University professor who ventured to say it.

I put him above Lamb as an essayist,because there is a flavor of actual knowledge and of practical acquaintance with the problems and affairs of life,which is lacking in the elfin Londoner.I do not say that the latter is not the rarer quality.There are my“Essays of Elia,”and they are well-thumbed as you see,so it is not because I love Lamb less that I love this other more.Both are exquisite,but Wendell Holmes is for ever touching some note which awakens an answering vibration within my own mind.

The essay must always be a somewhat repellent form of literature,unless it be handled with the lightest and deftest touch.It is too reminiscent of the school themes of our boyhood—to put a heading and then to show what you can get under it.Even Stevenson,for whom I have the most profound admiration,finds it difficult to carry the reader through a series of such papers,adorned with his original thought and quaint turn of phrase.Yet his“Men and Books”and“Virginibus Puerisque”are high examples of what may be done in spite of the inherent unavoidable difficulty of the task.

But his style!Ah,if Stevenson had only realized how beautiful and nervous was his own natural God-given style he would never have been at pains to acquire another!It is sad to read the much-lauded anecdote of his imitating this author and that,picking up and dropping,in search of the best.The best is always the most natural.When Stevenson becomes a conscious stylist,applauded by so many critics,he seems to me like a man who,having most natural curls,will still conceal them under a wig.The moment he is precious he loses his grip.But when he will abide by his own sterling Lowland Saxon,with the direct word and the short,cutting sentence,I know not where in recent years we may find his mate.In this strong,plain setting the occasional happy word shines like a cut jewel.A really good stylist is like Beau Brummell's description of a well-dressed man—so dressed that no one would ever observe him.The moment you begin to remark a man's style the odds are that there is something the matter with it.It is a clouding of the crystal—a diversion of the reader's mind from the matter to the manner,from the author's subject to the author himself.

No,I have not the Edinburgh edition.If you think of a presentation—but I should be the last to suggest it.Perhaps on the whole I would prefer to have him in scattered books,rather than in a complete set.The half is more than the whole of most authors,and not the least of him.I am sure that his friends who reverenced his memory had good warrant and express instructions to publish this complete edition—very possibly it was arranged before his lamented end.Yet,speaking generally,I would say that an author was best served by being very carefully pruned before being exposed to the winds of time.Let every weak twig,every immature shoot be shorn away,and nothing but strong,sturdy,well-seasoned branches left.So shall the whole tree stand strong for years to come.How false an impression of the true Stevenson would our critical grandchild acquire if he chanced to pick down any one of half a dozen of these volumes!As we watched his hand stray down the rank how we would pray that it might alight upon the ones we love,on the“New Arabian Nights,”“The Ebb Tide,”“The Wrecker,”“Kidnapped,”or“Treasure Island.”These can surely never lose their charm.

What noble books of their class are those last,“Kidnapped”and“Treasure Island”!both,as you see,shining forth upon my lower shelf.“Treasure Island”is the better story,while I could imagine that“Kidnapped”might have the more permanent value as being an excellent and graphic sketch of the state of the Highlands after the last Jacobite insurrection.Each contains one novel and admirable character,Alan Breck in the one,and Long John in the other.Surely John Silver,with his face the size of a ham,and his little gleaming eyes like crumbs of glass in the center of it,is the king of all seafaring desperadoes.Observe how the strong effect is produced in his case,seldom by direct assertion on the part of the story-teller,but usually by comparison,innuendo,or indirect reference.The objectionable Billy Bones is haunted by the dread of“a seafaring man with one leg.”Captain Flint,we are told,was a brave man;“he was afraid of none,not he,only Silver—Silver was that genteel.”Or,again,where John himself says,“there was some that was feared of Pew,and some that was feared of Flint;but Flint his own self was feared of me.Feared he was,and proud.They was the roughest crew afloat was Flint's.The devil himself would have been feared to go to sea with them.Well,now,I will tell you.I'm not a boasting man,and you seen yourself how easy I keep company;but when I was quartermaster,lambs wasn't the word for Flint's old buccaneers.”So by a touch here,and a hint there,there grows upon us the individuality of the smooth-tongued,ruthless,masterful,one-legged devil.He is to us not a creation of fiction,but an organic living reality with whom we have come in contact;such is the effect of the fine suggestive strokes with which he is drawn.And the buccaneers themselves,how simple,and yet how effective are the little touches which indicate their ways of thinking and of acting.“I want to go in that cabin,I do;I want their pickles and wine and that.”“Now,if you had sailed along of Bill you wouldn't have stood there to be spoke twice—not you.That was never Bill’s way,not the way of such as sailed with him.”Scott’s buccaneers in“The Pirate”are admirable,but they lack something human which we find here.It will be long before John Silver loses his place in sea fiction,“and you may lay to that.”

Stevenson was deeply influenced by Meredith,and even in these books the influence of the master is apparent.There is the apt use of an occasional archaic or unusual word,the short,strong descriptions,the striking metaphors,the somewhat staccato fashion of speech.Yet,in spite of this flavor,they have quite individuality enough to constitute a school of their own.Their faults,or rather perhaps their limitations,lie never in the execution,but entirely in the original conception.They picture only one side of life,and that a strange and exceptional one.There is no female interest.We feel that it is an apotheosis of the boy-story—the penny number of our youth in excelsis.But it is all so good,so fresh,so picturesque,that,however limited its scope,it still retains a definite and well-assured place in literature.There is no reason why“Treasure Island”should not be to the rising generation of the twenty-first century what“Robinson Crusoe”has been to that of the nineteenth.The balance of probability is all in that direction.

The modern masculine novel,dealing almost exclusively with the rougher,more stirring side of life,with the objective rather than the subjective,marks the reaction against the abuse of love in fiction.This one phase of life in its orthodox aspect,and ending in the conventional marriage,has been so hackneyed and worn to a shadow,that it is not to be wondered at that there is a tendency sometimes to swing to the other extreme,and to give it less than its fair share in the affairs of men.In British fiction nine books out of ten have held up love and marriage as the be-all and end-all of life.Yet we know,in actual practice,that this may not be so.In the career of the average man his marriage is an incident,and a momentous incident;but it is only one of several.He is swayed by many strong emotions;his business,his ambitions,his friendships,his struggles with the recurrent dangers and difficulties which tax a man's wisdom and his courage.Love will often play a subordinate part in his life.How many go through the world without ever loving at all?It jars upon us then to have it continually held up as the predominating,all-important fact in life;and there is a not unnatural tendency among a certain school,of which Stevenson is certainly the leader,to avoid altogether a source of interest which has been so misused and overdone.If all love-making were like that between Richard Feverel and Lucy Desborough,then indeed we could not have too much of it;but to be made attractive once more the passion must be handled by some great master who has courage to break down conventionalities and to go straight to actual life for his inspiration.

The use of the novel and piquant forms of speech is one of the most obvious of Stevenson's devices.No man handles his adjectives with greater judgment and nicer discrimination.There is hardly a page of his work where we do not come across words and expressions which strike us with a pleasant sense of novelty,and yet express the meaning with admirable conciseness.“His eyes came coasting round to me.”It is dangerous to begin quoting,as the examples are interminable,and each suggests another.Now and then he misses his mark,but it is very seldom.As an example,an“eye-shot”does not commend itself as a substitute for“a glance,”and“to teehee”for“to giggle”grates somewhat upon the ear,though the authority of Chaucer might be cited for the expressions.

Next in order is his extraordinary faculty for the use of pithy similes,which arrest the attention and stimulate the imagination.“His voice sounded hoarse and awkward,like a rusty lock.”“I saw her sway,like something stricken by the wind.”“His laugh rang false,like a cracked bell.”“His voice shook like a taut rope.”“My mind flying like a weaver's shuttle.”“His blows resounded on the grave as thick as sobs.”“The private guilty considerations I would continually observe to peep forth in the man's talk like rabbits from a hill.”Nothing could be more effective than these direct and homely comparisons.

After all,however,the main characteristic of Stevenson is his curious instinct for saying in the briefest space just those few words which stamp the impression upon the reader's mind.He will make you see a thing more clearly than you would probably have done had your eyes actually rested upon it.Here are a few of these word-pictures,taken haphazard from among hundreds of equal merit—

Not far off Macconochie was standing with his tongue out of his mouth,and his hand upon his chin,like a dull fellow thinking hard.

Stewart ran after us for more than a mile,and I could not help laughing as I looked back at last and saw him on a hill,holding his hand to his side,and nearly burst with running.

Ballantrae turned to me with a face all wrinkled up,and his teeth all showing in his mouth…….He said no word,but his whole appearance was a kind of dreadful question.

Look at him,if you doubt;look at him,grinning and gulping,a detected thief.

He looked me all over with a warlike eye,and I could see the challenge on his lips.

What could be more vivid than the effect produced by such sentences as these?

There is much more that might be said as to Stevenson's peculiar and original methods in fiction.As a minor point,it might be remarked that he is the inventor of what may be called the mutilated villain.It is true that Mr.Wilkie Collins has described one gentleman who had not only been deprived of all his limbs,but was further afflicted by the insupportable name of Miserrimus Dexter.Stevenson,however,has used the effect so often,and with such telling results,that he may be said to have made it his own.To say nothing of Hyde,who was the very impersonation of deformity,there is the horrid blind Pew,Black Dog with two fingers missing,Long John with his one leg,and the sinister catechist who is blind but shoots by ear,and smites about him with his staff.In“The Black Arrow,”too,there is another dreadful creature who comes tapping along with a stick.Often as he has used the device,he handles it so artistically that it never fails to produce its effect.

Is Stevenson a classic?Well,it is a large word that.You mean by a classic a piece of work which passes into the permanent literature of the country.As a rule you only know your classics when they are in their graves.Who guessed it of Poe,and who of Borrow?The Roman Catholics only canonize their saints a century after their death.So with our classics.The choice lies with our grandchildren.But I can hardly think that healthy boys will ever let Stevenson's books of adventure die,nor do I think that such a short tale as“The Pavilion on the Links”nor so magnificent a parable as“Dr.Jekyll and Mr.Hyde”will ever cease to be esteemed.How well I remember the eagerness,the delight with which I read those early tales in“Cornhill”away back in the late seventies and early eighties.They were unsigned,after the old unfair fashion,but no man with any sense of prose could fail to know that they were all by the same author.Only years afterwards did I learn who that author was.

I have Stevenson's collected poems over yonder in the small cabinet.Would that he had given us more!Most of them are the merest playful sallies of a freakish mind.But one should,indeed,be a classic,for it is in my judgment by all odds the best narrative ballad of the last century—that is if I am right in supposing that“The Ancient Mariner”appeared at the very end of the eighteenth.I would put Coleridge's tour de force of grim fancy first,but I know none other to compare in glamour and phrase and easy power with“Ticonderoga.”Then there is his immortal epitaph.The two pieces alone give him a niche of his own in our poetical literature,just as his character gives him a niche of his own in our affections.No,I never met him.But among my most prized possessions are several letters which I received from Samoa.From that distant tower he kept a surprisingly close watch upon what was doing among the bookmen,and it was his hand which was among the first held out to the striver,for he had quick appreciation and keen sympathies which met another man's work half way,and wove into it a beauty from his own mind.

And now,my very patient friend,the time has come for us to part,and I hope my little sermons have not bored you over-much.If I have put you on the track of anything which you did not know before,then verify it and pass it on.If I have not,there is no harm done,save that my breath and your time have been wasted.There may be a score of mistakes in what I have said—is it not the privilege of the conversationalist to misquote?My judgments may differ very far from yours,and my likings may be your abhorrence;but the mere thinking and talking of books is in itself good,be the upshot what it may.For the time the magic door is still shut.You are still in the land of faerie.But,alas,though you shut that door,you cannot seal it.Still come the ring of the bell,the call of the telephone,the summons back to the sordid world of work and men and daily strife.Well,that's the real life after all—this only the imitation.And yet,now that the portal is wide open and we stride out together,do we not face our fate with a braver heart for all the rest and quiet and comradeship that we found behind the Magic Door?

THE END

第十二章

好了,我们来跟故去的作者进行最后一次对话吧。耐心的朋友,我最后一次请你在绿色的旧沙发上坐得舒服一点,抬头看看上面的橡木书架,请在我对你讲述它们上面的书籍时,尽量忍耐我的啰唆。这是最后一次了!然而,当我看到这一排排书的时候,我没提到其中每十本里就有一本在我心中激起的感激之情,也没讲过当我的视线扫过它们时脑海里浮现的千头万绪,一点也没讲过。也许这样倒好,因为假如一个人把该说的都说完了,那肯定是讲得太多了。

暂时就让我再多说教一会儿吧!我态度这么庄重—但是,可别叫我老学究!—那是因为我看到了那个小角落里放的我精选的书籍,它们构成了我的科学图书馆。我想说的是,如果让我给刚踏上社会的年轻人一点建议,我会建议他每个星期留出一个晚上来阅读科学类的书籍。如果他能坚持,从二十岁开始做起,那到了他三十岁的时候,一定会发现自己的头脑已经得到了非同寻常的“武装”,无论他走在什么样的人生道路上,都会令他受益无穷。我建议读科学类的书,并不是说他应该去读那些老学究的旧书,或是因为研究鳞翅目的细分种类和双子叶植物的分类方法而把自己弄得晕头转向。这些枯燥的细节知识就像是科学这座魔法花园里那些带刺的灌木,如果你在出发散步的时候就一头扎进去,那可真是太傻了。在你探索完了露天的花床和好走的小路之前,一定不要去靠近它们。为此,不要去看那些教科书,大众科学很有魅力,但是那些书可不会吸引你或是培养你的兴趣。你可别想着当那么多学科的专家。你更应该对一般规律有广泛的认识,并且要理解它们之间的联系。只要稍微读一点书,就能让人拥有一些地理知识,这些地理知识足以让人觉得采石场和铁路路堑也很有趣。不多的动物学知识就足以满足你的好奇心,区分出在眼前这盏灯周围飞舞的橘背灯蛾的学名和习性。只需要一点植物学知识,你就能认出散步时在路边看到的每朵花,而当你碰到知识范围之外的东西的时候,也能体会到好奇心带来的兴奋。稍稍读点考古学的书,就能了解那些英国古墓的故事,或者能帮你拼凑出南方草原上散落的罗马人遗迹的大致分布图。了解一些天文学常识,当你仰望天空的时候,就会更专注。你可以将地球的兄弟行星从陌生的星斗中挑出来,它们都和你的星球一样,在同一个星系里运行。由此你可以领略到宇宙运行的秩序、美感和壮丽,这一切都表明在物质世界背后肯定有神的存在。我不明白科学家怎么能是唯物论者,宗派论主义者又怎么能将造物主的能力给局限起来。有画家,才能有画;有雕塑家,雕塑才能出现;有音乐家,才能有音乐;你能找出没有前者就有后者的例子吗?要是你能,那再跟我谈宇宙存在的背后没有一个造物主,或者,随你用什么名称叫他。

这儿还有一本弗拉马里翁的《大气》,非常漂亮,红色和金色的封面,虽然因为年岁太久有点褪色了。这本书有个来历,让我十分珍惜它。在非洲西海岸的时候,一个来自法国的年轻人把这本书给了我,当作治疗的费用,后来他死于热病。看到它就让我想起了在那艘小船的铺位上,那个年轻人脸色土黄,眼睛凸出,悲伤地看着我。可怜的孩子,我想他再也看不到心爱的故乡马赛了!

说起大众科学知识,我觉得塞缪尔·拉宁的书最能激发一个人最初的兴趣,并且让人了解某个学科大致的知识结构。

谁能想到,这些书里看到的这位睿智的学者、儒雅的梦想家,居然也在一家铁路公司蛮有干劲地做着秘书的工作呢?很多科学上成就极高的人,最开始通常都是做着很乏味的日常工作。赫伯特·斯宾塞最初是铁路工程师。华莱士是土地测量师。但是,像拉宁这样一个拥有如此超凡的科学头脑的人,居然继续把生命投入到枯燥的日常工作中,直到年纪很大实在做不动了才停下来,但他的灵魂一直都能接受新鲜观念,头脑依然能吸收最新的知识成果,这真是令人敬佩。读一读他的书吧,会让你成为一个更丰富的人。

跟人聊天时,谈谈最近读的书是非常好的选择。你可能会说这对听众来说有点太难了;但是,如果不想谈话涉及太多隐私,我觉得这要比那些寻常的闲聊好得多。当然了,这需要一点技巧,你要很谨慎。正是因为谈到了拉宁,才把我的思绪引到了这个话题上。我在某次工作餐,或是在某个其他的场合的时候,听到某人说起了索姆河谷的史前遗迹。我知道所有相关的知识,也告诉了他我所知道的。然后,我提到了尤卡坦半岛上的石头庙宇,他很快就接上了这个话题,并且就此话题进行了进一步详述。他提到了古老的秘鲁文明,我对这方面的了解也跟他不相上下。我还引用了对的的喀喀湖的生动描绘,这个他也都知道。他又说起了第四纪人类,我也能一直跟上。我们对彼此拥有如此广博而准确的知识感到震惊,直到我突然想到了为什么会这样。“你在读塞缪尔·拉宁的《人类之起源》!”我大声说道。他确实是在读这本书,碰巧我也在读。我们在给对方浇水呢,而这水都是刚从源头汲来的。

在我的科学书架的顶头处有两本大书,可能现在的一些学究还在争论,觉得不能把它们归入科学门类。这套书就是迈尔斯的《人类的品性》。不管怎么样,我认为这套书可能会在百年之后被认为是一部伟大的开山之作,从它将延伸出一整套科学体系。在这两本书的封面和封底之间,见证了他无与伦比的耐心、勤奋、思考和公正,他博学的头脑能将千万个零散的细节整合起来,用一致性的系统将它们全都收拢在一张网当中。正如达尔文沉迷于动物学研究,总是充满激情地寻找并收集新奇的物种一样,迈尔斯也在人类精神的晦暗领域进行了深入研究。他提出的假说前所未有,以至于需要发明出一套新的命名法和术语来表达,例如超能感应、潜意识,其他的则都有实例可查,并以细致、严谨的文字表述了推导过程,这将一直具有里程碑式的意义。

在文学的任何一个分支中,带一点科学思想和科学方法的作品都有极大的吸引力,不管它们离实际研究有多远。例如,爱伦·坡的故事在很大程度上应归功于此,但是就他的情况来说,那都是幻想罢了。儒勒·凡尔纳娴熟地运用了大量自然界的真实知识描绘各种不可思议的神奇事物,但却让人觉得可信,并且看得欲罢不能。然而,他的作品最优美之处在于其中轻灵的叙述形式,许多有趣的想象场景都是从真实例子出发,引出类比和证明,想象与现实交相呼应,两者的结合给读者带来了一种特别的阅读快感。

温德尔·福尔摩斯不朽的三部曲《独裁者》《诗人》和《早餐桌上的教授》,这三本小小的书最能说明我的观点了。在这几本书里,时常用典故或类比来补充微妙、文雅又细致的见解,显示了作者广博的知识面,准确度也很高。他的作品真是太棒了!他充满了智慧,妙语连珠,心胸宽广,那么宽容!假如我们死后在极乐世界能选择自己喜欢的哲学家讲课,就像古时在雅典那样,我肯定会加入围着这位波士顿贤者的人群当中,听他那充满人性、饱含仁慈的讲演。我想应该是科学一直以来对我潜移默化的影响,尤其是我早年学生时代受到的医学方面的教育,让我一直对这方面的书有如此强烈的兴趣。我从来没有见过温德尔,却觉得从未如此了解和仰慕过一个人。我的人生愿望之一就是希望有一天能见到他本人,但是由于命运的捉弄,当我抵达他所在的城市时,只能在他刚立好的墓碑面前献上一个花圈。你再去读一读他的书,看看有没有被他书里超前的想法深深打动。对我来说,他的作品就像是丁尼生的《悼念集》,它绽放的时间超前了五十年。我们随便翻到一页读一读,其中都不乏精彩的段落,都能说明作者视野宽广,遣词灵活,所用的类比极为幽默,而且相当有启发性,感染力十足。下面就有一个例子,跟许多其他段落一样,结合了所有这些不可多得的优点:

通常,精神病的发生是由于正常大脑超负荷运转。对于运行良好的精神机体而言,如果突然有外力试图让其停止或是反方向运转,不可避免就会折断轮子或杠杆。而对于软弱的精神机制来说,它根本无法聚集足够的力量对自身造成伤害;蠢笨的人常常不会遭受“发疯”的伤害。我们经常会看到有的人由宗教信仰引发精神紊乱被送进精神病院。坦白说,我觉得他们比许多在精神病院之外的人要好,那些人尽管保持了正常的神智,还在尽情地享受生活,但脑子里的想法跟病人一样。任何一个正派人,要是脑子里尽是一些那样的想法,不疯才怪呢……任何野蛮、残忍、粗野的观念,都会让大多数人,甚至所有人的生活陷入绝望。任何认为有必要根除我们易被控制的本能的观念—无论你管它叫什么,无论信它的人是修道士、托钵僧还是教会执事,如果这种观念被接受了,它就会让每一个冷静清醒的头脑变得疯狂。

一位大学教授敢这么说话,真是给沉闷的五十年代带来了一丝辩证法的清风,而且也见证了他本人的道德勇气。

在散文方面,比起兰姆,我更喜欢温德尔的作品,因为我觉得他的文章里有实际知识,而且如实地反映了生活中的问题和事件,在这一点上,兰姆这位精灵般的伦敦人有所欠缺。我并不是说兰姆不具有那种难得的天资。那里有我收藏的《伊利亚随笔集》,你看看那本书就知道我也经常读,所以并不是说我不喜欢兰姆,而更喜欢温德尔。他们都写出了绝妙的作品,但温德尔·福尔摩斯总是能在我心里奏出某种旋律,让我对他产生一种回应的震颤。

散文总是不太讨人喜欢,除非作者的笔调足够灵活,足够娴熟。它也让人想起在学校读书时的课堂练习—给你一个题目,看你能在这个题目下写出什么来。就连我最崇敬的史蒂文森写的散文—就算他的散文里有一些新颖的观点和优雅的措辞—读者读过几篇之后也就很难继续往下读了。虽然散文创作有不可避免的难处,但还是可以做得非常好,他的《人与书》和《少男少女》就是极佳范本。

但是他的文风,真令人遗憾!啊,假如史蒂文森能意识到他自己就拥有天赐的文笔该多好,而且是那么优美而有力,那他就不会煞费苦心地去学用别人的风格写作了!关于这事有一则广受赞誉的传闻,说他如何模仿这位或那位作家,不断变换风格,以期找到最佳的写作方式。读到这事真是太令人伤心了!最自然的才是最好的啊。当史蒂文森有意识地锤炼文风的时候,很多评论家给予了赞扬,但是我觉得这时候的他就像是一个明明天生有好看的鬈发,却非要把一顶假发戴在头上的人一样。当他写得有点做作的时候,就失去了对文章的把控。但是只要他忠于自我,做回那个苏格兰低地的撒克逊人,使用直截了当的词语和精练的短句,那么,我觉得近年来都找不出能与他匹敌的作家。在这种强有力又朴实的背景下,偶尔出现的欢快语句就像是经过切割的宝石。一位真正好的文体家就像是博·布伦美笔下衣着得体的绅士一样—穿得那么考究,旁人无从品评。当你开始注意到一个人的风格的时候,就说明里面有些问题。它就是水晶里的一点瑕疵,把读者的注意力从文本转向了手法,从作者的主题转向了作者本身。

不,我没有爱丁堡的版本。如果你实在想要找出一个代表,我真的不想提什么建议。也许我更希望在零散的书里看他的文字,而不是看他的全套作品。他一半的作品要比很多作家全部作品更优质,而且也代表了他本人不错的水准。我相信那些尊重他的友人肯定得到了授权,并针对如何出版全集给出了建议,而且很可能是在他令人遗憾地离世之前就安排好了。但是,我觉得,通常情况下,一位作者应该经过很好的修剪之后,再让他暴露在时间的风吹雨打中。那些软弱的枝条、不成熟的嫩芽都应该被去掉,只留下强健、茁壮、挺过了风风雨雨的树枝,这样才能让整棵树在未来的岁月里挺拔不倒。如果我们爱读书的孙辈从这整套书里随便拿出一本书,真是太有可能对史蒂文森留下错误印象了!当我们看着他的手在书架上游走的时候,只能祈祷他的手最后能停在我们喜欢的那些书上,《新一千零一夜》《落潮》《打捞船》《绑架》或是《金银岛》都可以。这些书从来没有失去过它们的魅力。

后面这两本书—《绑架》和《金银岛》—真是这个类型中极为优秀的作品。它们都在我下层的书架上闪闪发光呢!《金银岛》讲的故事虽然更精彩一些,但是我认为《绑架》拥有更恒久的价值,因为它生动描绘了查理二世最后一次复辟之后苏格兰高地的情况。两本书里各有一个与众不同、令人敬畏的人物,一本里是艾伦·布瑞克,另一本里是高个儿约翰。当然了,约翰·西尔弗的脸跟火腿一样大,两只小眼睛像两块玻璃碎渣一样在脸中间闪着光,他真是所有海上亡命徒的国王。通过他可以观察作者如何制造出令人印象深刻的效果,作者很少通过叙述者的视角来说什么,而是通过对比,通过影射和间接引语。讨人厌的比利·伯恩斯很害怕一个“只有一条腿的海上恶徒”。小说告诉我们弗林特船长是一个勇敢的人,“他可是谁都不怕,只怕西尔弗—西尔弗就是那么厉害”。或者,还有约翰自己说的:“有的人怕皮尤,有的人怕弗林特,但是弗林特本人很怕我。虽然他怕我,但他也有值得骄傲的地方。弗林特的船员个个能打,是海上最厉害的一群人,就是魔鬼都怕跟他们一起出海。所以,现在,我跟你说吧。我不是个爱吹牛的人,你自己也看到了我跟我的伙计们相处得很好。但是,一旦我掌舵的时候,弗林特都怕的老海盗可就不是小羊羔了。”从各处的描写和暗示中,我们渐渐看到了一个油嘴滑舌、冷酷无情、领导有方的独腿恶魔。对我们来说,他不再是一个被小说家创造出来的虚构人物,而像是我们遇见的现实中活生生的人。作者就是用这样细致而隐晦的笔法将这个人物描绘了出来。还有那帮海盗,作者也只用了简单的几笔就把他们思考和行事方式写了出来,但非常有效。“我是很想进那个房舱,真想;我想要他们的腌菜和红酒什么的。”“听着,如果你真和比尔一起出过海,你是不会站在那里,让人给你讲两遍该做什么,你肯定不会。那绝对不是比尔的风格,也不是跟他一起出过海的人会干的事。”司各特在《海盗》一书里写的那些海盗令人叹服,但是缺少一点人情味,而我们在这本书里能找到它。约翰·西尔弗这个人物在关于海洋的小说中会一直占有一席之地,“这一点绝对不错”。

史蒂文森深受梅瑞狄斯的影响,在《绑架》和《金银岛》这两本书里也可以看出这位大师的影响。史蒂文森有时候会用一个古体词或是很不常用的词语,他描写的文字通常很短、很有力,用的比喻非同寻常,他的人物说话也大都很短促。不过,尽管他们有这些相似点,但他们的个人风格还是很明显的,足以自成一派。他们的不足,或者说他们的局限,从来不在行文中体现,而是在他们最初的观念里体现。他们只刻画生活的某一个方面,而且是非常奇怪、不同寻常的一面。书里没什么跟女性相关的内容,这让我们觉得简直就是“男孩小说”的巅峰—我们小时候爱看的一便士一本的侦探小说的大集合。但是故事都很好看,新奇而生动,所以尽管它的视野有局限,仍然稳固地在文学史上占据着一席之地。《鲁滨逊漂流记》对十九世纪的年轻一代产生了重大影响,《金银岛》完全可以对二十一世纪的年轻一代产生相同影响。局面完全在向那个方向发展。

现代的那些男性主义小说,通常都只描写生活中艰辛而动荡的部分,只关注客观的部分而不管主观的部分。这标志着对之前的小说滥用爱情主题的旧观念的抗拒。以正统的视角来写人生的这个阶段,然后以传统的婚姻结束,这简直已经成了陈词滥调,让人厌烦,所以可以理解有时候作家会走向另一个极端,在他们笔下,这件事在男人生活中并没有得到应有的重视。英国的小说,十本里有九本都是把婚姻当成生命中的圆满和结束。但是我们知道,在现实生活中,真相并非如此。对于一个普通人来说,婚姻不过是他人生中的一件事而已,当然,很重要;但是,也只是许多重大事件中的一件。他会被许多强烈的情感左右;他的事业,他的野心,他的友情,还有那些不断出现的危险和苦难,这些都会削弱人的智慧和勇气,他要与之搏斗。通常,爱情只能在他生活中扮演一个次要的角色。这世上有多少人根本没有体会过爱情就过完了一生?而爱情被这么频繁地当成生命中首要且最重要的事情,真是让人反感;所以,毫不奇怪,有的流派就完全避开了与之相关的内容,因为这个话题已经被太多人滥用,史蒂文森当然就是这个流派的领袖。如

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