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the poet at the breakfast table-第26部分
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sentences like that。 They stumble and stop; or get interrupted;
change a word; begin again; miss connections of verbs and nouns; and
so on; till they blunder out their meaning。 But I did let fall a
word or two; showing the impression the celestial laboratory produced
upon me。 I rather think I must own to the 〃Rock of Ages〃 comparison。
Thereupon the 〃Man of Letters;〃 so called; took his pipe from his
mouth; and said that he did n't go in 〃for sentiment and that sort of
thing。 Gush was played out。〃
The Member of the Haouse; who; as I think; is not wanting in that
homely good sense which one often finds in plain people from the
huckleberry districts; but who evidently supposes the last speaker to
be what he calls 〃a tahlented mahn;〃 looked a little puzzled。 My
remark seemed natural and harmless enough to him; I suppose; but I
had been distinctly snubbed; and the Member of the Haouse thought I
must defend myself; as is customary in the deliberative body to which
he belongs; when one gentleman accuses another gentleman of mental
weakness or obliquity。 I could not make up my mind to oblige him at
that moment by showing fight。 I suppose that would have pleased my
assailant; as I don't think he has a great deal to lose; and might
have made a little capital out of me if he could have got a laugh out
of the Member or either of the dummies;I beg their pardon again; I
mean the two undemonstrative boarders。 But I will tell you; Beloved;
just what I think about this matter。
We poets; you know; are much given to indulging in sentiment; which
is a mode of consciousness at a discount just now with the new
generation of analysts who are throwing everything into their
crucibles。 Now we must not claim too much for sentiment。 It does
not go a great way in deciding questions of arithmetic; or algebra;
or geometry。 Two and two will undoubtedly make four; irrespective of
the emotions or other idiosyncrasies of the calculator; and the three
angles of a triangle insist on being equal to two right angles; in
the face of the most impassioned rhetoric or the most inspired verse。
But inasmuch as religion and law and the whole social order of
civilized society; to say nothing of literature and art; are so
founded on and pervaded by sentiment that they would all go to pieces
without it; it is a word not to be used too lightly in passing
judgment; as if it were an element to be thrown out or treated with
small consideration。 Reason may be the lever; but sentiment gives
you the fulcrum and the place to stand on if you want to move the
world。 Even 〃sentimentality;〃 which is sentiment overdone; is better
than that affectation of superiority to human weakness which is only
tolerable as one of the stage properties of full…blown dandyism; and
is; at best; but half…blown cynicism; which participle and noun you
can translate; if you happen to remember the derivation of the last
of them; by a single familiar word。 There is a great deal of false
sentiment in the world; as there is of bad logic and erroneous
doctrine; butit is very much less disagreeable to hear a young poet
overdo his emotions; or even deceive himself about them; than to hear
a caustic…epithet flinger repeating such words as 〃sentimentality〃
and 〃entusymusy;〃one of the least admirable of Lord Byron's
bequests to our language;for the purpose of ridiculing him into
silence。 An overdressed woman is not so pleasing as she might be;
but at any rate she is better than the oil of vitriol squirter; whose
profession it is to teach young ladies to avoid vanity by spoiling
their showy silks and satins。
The Lady was the first of our party who was invited to look through
the equatorial。 Perhaps this world had proved so hard to her that
she was pained to think that other worlds existed; to be homes of
suffering and sorrow。 Perhaps she was thinking it would be a happy
change when she should leave this dark planet for one of those
brighter spheres。 She sighed; at any rate; but thanked the Young
Astronomer for the beautiful sights he had shown her; and gave way to
the next comer; who was That Boy; now in a state of irrepressible
enthusiasm to see the Man in the Moon。 He was greatly disappointed
at not making out a colossal human figure moving round among the
shining summits and shadowy ravines of the 〃spotty globe。〃
The Landlady came next and wished to see the moon also; in preference
to any other object。 She was astonished at the revelations of the
powerful telescope。 Was there any live creatures to be seen on the
moon? she asked。 The Young Astronomer shook his head; smiling a
little at the question。 Was there any meet'n'…houses? There was no
evidence; he said; that the moon was inhabited。 As there did not
seem to be either air or water on its surface; the inhabitants would
have a rather hard time of it; and if they went to meeting the
sermons would be apt to be rather dry。 If there were a building on
it as big as York minster; as big as the Boston Coliseum; the great
telescopes like Lord Rosse's would make it out。 But it seemed to be
a forlorn place; those who had studied it most agreed in considering
it a 〃cold; crude; silent; and desolate〃 ruin of nature; without the
possibility; if life were on it; of articulate speech; of music; even
of sound。 Sometimes a greenish tint was seen upon its surface; which
might have been taken for vegetation; but it was thought not
improbably to be a reflection from the vast forests of South America。
The ancients had a fancy; some of them; that the face of the moon was
a mirror in which the seas and shores of the earth were imaged。 Now
we know the geography of the side toward us about as well as that of
Asia; better than that of Africa。 The Astronomer showed them one of
the common small photographs of the moon。 He assured them that he
had received letters inquiring in all seriousness if these alleged
lunar photographs were not really taken from a peeled orange。 People
had got angry with him for laughing at them for asking such a
question。 Then he gave them an account of the famous moon…hoax which
came out; he believed; in 1835。 It was full of the most bare…faced
absurdities; yet people swallowed it all; and even Arago is said to
have treated it seriously as a thing that could not well be true; for
Mr。 Herschel would have certainly notified him of these marvellous
discoveries。 The writer of it had not troubled himself to invent
probabilities; but had borrowed his scenery from the Arabian Nights
and his lunar inhabitants from Peter Wilkins。
After this lecture the Capitalist stepped forward and applied his eye
to the lens。 I suspect it to have been shut most of the time; for I
observe a good many elderly people adjust the organ of vision to any
optical instrument in that way。 I suppose it is from the instinct of
protection to the eye; the same instinct as that which makes the raw
militia…man close it when he pulls the; trigger of his musket the
first time。 He expressed himself highly gratified; however; with
what he saw; and retired from the instrument to make room for the
Young Girl。
She threw her hair back and took her position at the instrument。
Saint Simeon Stylites the Younger explained the wonders of the moon
to her;Tycho and the grooves radiating from it; Kepler and
Copernicus with their craters and ridges; and all the most brilliant
shows of this wonderful little world。 I thought he was more diffuse
and more enthusiastic in his descriptions than he had been with the
older members of the party。 I don't doubt the old gentleman who
lived so long on the top of his pillar would have kept a pretty
sinner (if he could have had an elevator to hoist her up to him)
longer than he would have kept her grandmother。 These young people
are so ignorant; you know。 As for our Scheherezade; her delight was
unbounded; and her curiosity insatiable。 If there were any living
creatures there; what odd things they must be。 They could n't have
any lungs; nor any hearts。 What a pity! Did they ever die? How
could they expire if they didn't breathe? Burn up? No air to burn
in。 Tumble into some of those horrid pits; perhaps; and break all to
bits。 She wondered how the young people there liked it; or whether
there were any young people there; perhaps nobody was young and
nobody was old; but they were like mummies all of themwhat an idea
two mummies making love to each other! So she went on in a
rattling; giddy kind of way; for she was excited by the strange scene
in which she found herself; and quite astonished the Young Astronomer
with her vivacity。 All at once she turned to him。
Will you show me the double star you said I should see?
With the greatest pleasure;he said; and proceeded to wheel the
ponderous dome; and then to adjust the instrument; I think to the one
in Andromeda; or that in Cygnus; but I should not know one of them
from the other。
How beautiful!she said as she looked at the wonderful object。…One
is orange red and one is emerald green。
The young man made an explanation in which he said something about
complementary colors。
Goodness!exclaimed the Landlady。…What! complimentary to our
party?
H
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