登陆注册
36829600000003

第3章

He seemed not to mind, however, climbing to the little apartment we had in Boston when we came there in 1866, and he made this call upon us in due form, bringing Mrs. Holmes with him as if to accent the recognition socially. We were then incredibly young, much younger than I find people ever are nowadays, and in the consciousness of our youth we felt, to the last exquisite value of the fact, what it was to have the Autocrat come to see us; and I believe he was not displeased to perceive this; he liked to know that you felt his quality in every way. That first winter, however, I did not see him often, and in the spring we went to live in Cambridge, and thereafter I met him chiefly at Longfellow's, or when Icame in to dine at the Fieldses', in Boston. It was at certain meetings of the Dante Club, when Longfellow read aloud his translation for criticism, and there was supper later, that one saw the doctor; and his voice was heard at the supper rather than at the criticism, for he was no Italianate. He always seemed to like a certain turn of the talk toward the mystical, but with space for the feet on a firm ground of fact this side of the shadows; when it came to going over among them, and laying hold of them with the band of faith, as if they were substance, he was not of the excursion. It is well known how fervent, I cannot say devout, a spiritualist Longfellow's brother-in-law, Appleton, was; and when he was at the table too, it took all the poet's delicate skill to keep him and the Autocrat from involving themselves in a cataclysmal controversy upon the matter of manifestations. With Doctor Holmes the inquiry was inquiry, to the last, I believe, and the burden of proof was left to the ghosts and their friends. His attitude was strictly scientific; he denied nothing, but he expected the supernatural to be at least as convincing as the natural.

There was a time in his history when the popular ignorance classed him with those who were once rudely called infidels; but the world has since gone so fast and so far that the mind he was of concerning religious belief would now be thought religious by a good half of the religious world. It is true that he had and always kept a grudge against the ancestral Calvinism which afflicted his youth; and he was through all rises and lapses of opinion essentially Unitarian; but of the honest belief of any one, I am sure he never felt or spoke otherwise than most tolerantly, most tenderly. As often as he spoke of religion, and his talk tended to it very often, I never heard an irreligious word from him, far less a scoff or sneer at religion; and I am certain that this was not merely because he would have thought it bad taste, though undoubtedly he would have thought it bad taste; I think it annoyed, it hurt him, to be counted among the iconoclasts, and he would have been profoundly grieved if he could have known how widely this false notion of him once prevailed. It can do no harm at this late day to impart from the secrets of the publishing house the fact that a supposed infidelity in the tone of his story The Guardian Angel cost the Atlantic Monthly many subscribers. Now the tone of that story would not be thought even mildly agnostic, I fancy; and long before his death the author had outlived the error concerning him.

It was not the best of his stories, by any means, and it would not be too harsh to say that it was the poorest. His novels all belonged to an order of romance which was as distinctly his own as the form of dramatized essay which he invented in the Autocrat. If he did not think poorly of them, he certainly did not think too proudly, and I heard him quote with relish the phrase of a lady who had spoken of them to him as his " medicated novels." That, indeed, was perhaps what they were; a faint, faint odor of the pharmacopoeia clung to their pages; their magic was scientific. He knew this better than any one else, of course, and if any one had said it in his turn he would hardly have minded it. But what he did mind was the persistent misinterpretation of his intention in certain quarters where he thought he had the right to respectful criticism in stead of the succession of sneers that greeted the successive numbers of his story; and it was no secret that he felt the persecution keenly. Perhaps he thought that he had already reached that time in his literary life when he was a fact rather than a question, and when reasons and not feelings must have to do with his acceptance or rejection. But he had to live many years yet before he reached this state. When he did reach it, happily a good while before his death, I do not believe any man ever enjoyed the like condition more. He loved to feel himself out of the fight, with much work before him still, but with nothing that could provoke ill-will in his activities. He loved at all times to take himself objectively, if I may so express my sense of a mental attitude that misled many. As I have said before, he was universally interested, and he studied the universe from himself. I do not know how one is to study it otherwise; the impersonal has really no existence; but with all his subtlety and depth he was of a make so ******, of a spirit so *****, that he could not practise the feints some use to conceal that interest in self which, after all, every one knows is only concealed. He frankly and joyously made himself the starting-point in all his inquest of the hearts and minds of other men, but so far from singling himself out in this, and standing apart in it, there never was any one who was more eagerly and gladly your fellow-being in the things of the soul.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 摄政王的神医王妃

    摄政王的神医王妃

    他是人人闻其名颤抖的摄政王,她是养在深闺的丞相之女;他十二岁一战成名天下,那时她六岁尚不会说话;他十五岁女人竞相一睹风姿,她九岁依旧无任何改变,她一朝穿越,成就一段旷世奇缘,她得了他的心,她为他而来;那一年的那一晚,绸缪束薪,三星在天......
  • 期待着的你

    期待着的你

    生命是不断的学习当中,但是就如同大自然的历史一样,一切都无法倒退,皆只能前行,但是,人类从不因为没有,而不去尝试,我觉得就如同那句话“我最重要的不是这段生命,而是这段生命里的经历”
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 暴走修仙

    暴走修仙

    好吃懒做十八年,一下砸回三年前,咱要修仙,咱要当仙家,咱要报仇。咱要把当年砸死咱的小兔崽子弄死。于是,无节操乡下小废物修仙,众男遭殃的故事开始了。
  • 魅医妖娆

    魅医妖娆

    华夏古医世家的家主,意外穿越,变成护国公府受尽欺辱的废材丑女,强魂注入,傲视天下……
  • 黄莲东岩禅师语录

    黄莲东岩禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 逐昏之时

    逐昏之时

    尽情的在这场游戏中进行角逐吧!只为了等到神降临于世的那一刻,当打开禁书的时候,游戏就已经开始了。这是关于他的故事,一个普通的男人,或者说是一个普通的男孩的故事……
  • 孤侠傲情

    孤侠傲情

    被封印的恶魔相柳重新出世,世界再度迎来黑暗的时刻,好在有一群意气风发的少年,他们不怕艰难,无惧困难,最终再次将相柳封印。
  • 命中注定之我的公主

    命中注定之我的公主

    黑神是黑道头头是最大的头目是警方一直都以打击的目标,可是他们的手中对他们的证据少之又少,下班白骏驰经过家中的路程见到西门富雍被人枪杀,他的正义感和职业感。西门富雍在最后一口气的时候把手中的一本小黑本子交给了他,这就是他们一直以来想要把黑神绳之于法的最有利的证据。白骏驰和小仔还有瑞贤安全的到家后,白骏驰把自己的小公主‘白雪’抱在怀里,跟她玩起了一个游戏。西门宇熙第一次看到白雪,心里对这个突然闯入自己世界里的小女孩有一丝的感觉,爷爷让他带着这个小妹妹到楼上,爷爷抱着妹妹往那些黑压压的人群走去,接着就是母亲也哭着跑出去。没过多久妹妹和妈妈都倒下了!他对爷爷的仇恨,直到爷爷临终的时候也都没有回来送他会后一程。十五年,再次的回到这个家,而那个小女孩也变成了一个亭亭玉立的小姑娘,但是心中的仇恨让他无法接受她的存在,所以他一次又一次的想要把她赶出西门家,一次又一次的把她置身在危险之中。
  • 极品无赖之:无赖圣尊..more

    极品无赖之:无赖圣尊..more

    吴莱站在街头,那忧郁的眼神,唏嘘的胡碴子以及帅到无敌的风衣吸引了众人的目光。他甩了甩那神乎其技的飘逸长发,露出那自以为很迷人的笑容,意气风发地说:“请叫哥无赖。其实,哥不是传说。”话音未落,板砖横飞。“打死这个山寨‘犀利哥’,凭他那样,还想当无赖,无赖做到他份上,真是丢我们无赖的脸。……”