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glaucus-第7部分

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training; men whose bodies were developed; and their lungs fed on 

pure breezes; long before they brought to work in the city the 

bodily and mental strength which they had gained by loch and moor。  

But it is not so with their sons。  Their business habits are learnt 

in the counting…house; a good school; doubtless; as far as it goes:  

but one which will expand none but the lowest intellectual 

faculties; which will make them accurate accountants; shrewd 

computers and competitors; but never the originators of daring 

schemes; men able and willing to go forth to replenish the earth 

and subdue it。  And in the hours of relaxation; how much of their 

time is thrown away; for want of anything better; on frivolity; not 

to say on secret profligacy; parents know too well; and often shut 

their eyes in very despair to evils which they know not how to 

cure。  A frightful majority of our middle…class young men are 

growing up effeminate; empty of all knowledge but what tends 

directly to the making of a fortune; or rather; to speak correctly; 

to the keeping up the fortunes which their fathers have made for 

them; while of the minority; who are indeed thinkers and readers; 

how many women as well as men have we seen wearying their souls 

with study undirected; often misdirected; craving to learn; yet not 

knowing how or what to learn; cultivating; with unwholesome energy; 

the head at the expense of the body and the heart; catching up with 

the most capricious self…will one mania after another; and tossing 

it away again for some new phantom; gorging the memory with facts 

which no one has taught them to arrange; and the reason with 

problems which they have no method for solving; till they fret 

themselves in a chronic fever of the brain; which too often urge 

them on to plunge; as it were; to cool the inward fire; into the 

ever…restless seas of doubt or of superstition。  It is a sad 

picture。  There are many who may read these pages whose hearts will 

tell them that it is a true one。  What is wanted in these cases is 

a methodic and scientific habit of mind; and a class of objects on 

which to exercise that habit; which will fever neither the 

speculative intellect nor the moral sense; and those physical 

science will give; as nothing else can give it。



Moreover; to revert to another point which we touched just now; man 

has a body as well as a mind; and with the vast majority there will 

be no MENS SANA unless there be a CORPUS SANUM for it to inhabit。  

And what outdoor training to give our youths is; as we have already 

said; more than ever puzzling。  This difficulty is felt; perhaps; 

less in Scotland than in England。  The Scotch climate compels 

hardiness; the Scotch bodily strength makes it easy; and Scotland; 

with her mountain…tours in summer; and her frozen lochs in winter; 

her labyrinth of sea…shore; and; above all; that priceless boon 

which Providence has bestowed on her; in the contiguity of her 

great cities to the loveliest scenery; and the hills where every 

breeze is health; affords facilities for healthy physical life 

unknown to the Englishman; who has no Arthur's Seat towering above 

his London; no Western Islands sporting the ocean firths beside his 

Manchester。  Field sports; with the invaluable training which they 

give; if not





〃The reason firm;〃





yet still





〃The temperate will;

Endurance; foresight; strength; and skill;〃





have become impossible for the greater number:  and athletic 

exercises are now; in England at least; becoming more and more 

artificialized and expensive; and are confined more and more … with 

the honourable exception of the football games in Battersea Park … 

to our Public Schools and the two elder Universities。  All honour; 

meanwhile; to the Volunteer movement; and its moral as well as its 

physical effects。  But it is only a comparatively few of the very 

sturdiest who are likely to become effective Volunteers; and so 

really gain the benefits of learning to be soldiers。  And yet the 

young man who has had no substitute for such occupations will cut 

but a sorry figure in Australia; Canada; or India; and if he stays 

at home; will spend many a pound in doctors' bills; which could 

have been better employed elsewhere。  〃Taking a walk〃 … as one 

would take a pill or a draught … seems likely soon to become the 

only form of outdoor existence possible for too many inhabitants of 

the British Isles。  But a walk without an object; unless in the 

most lovely and novel of scenery; is a poor exercise; and as a 

recreation; utterly nil。  I never knew two young lads go out for a 

〃constitutional;〃 who did not; if they were commonplace youths; 

gossip the whole way about things better left unspoken; or; if they 

were clever ones; fall on arguing and brainsbeating on politics or 

metaphysics from the moment they left the door; and return with 

their wits even more heated and tired than they were when they set 

out。  I cannot help fancying that Milton made a mistake in a 

certain celebrated passage; and that it was not 〃sitting on a hill 

apart;〃 but tramping four miles out and four miles in along a 

turnpike…road; that his hapless spirits discoursed





〃Of fate; free…will; foreknowledge absolute;

And found no end; in wandering mazes lost。〃





Seriously; if we wish rural walks to do our children any good; we 

must give them a love for rural sights; an object in every walk; we 

must teach them … and we can teach them … to find wonder in every 

insect; sublimity in every hedgerow; the records of past worlds in 

every pebble; and boundless fertility upon the barren shore; and 

so; by teaching them to make full use of that limited sphere in 

which they now are; make them faithful in a few things; that they 

may be fit hereafter to be rulers over much。



I may seem to exaggerate the advantages of such studies; but the 

question after all is one of experience:  and I have had experience 

enough and to spare that what I say is true。  I have seen the young 

man of fierce passions; and uncontrollable daring; expend healthily 

that energy which threatened daily to plunge him into recklessness; 

if not into sin; upon hunting out and collecting; through rock and 

bog; snow and tempest; every bird and egg of the neighbouring 

forest。  I have seen the cultivated man; craving for travel and for 

success in life; pent up in the drudgery of London work; and yet 

keeping his spirit calm; and perhaps his morals all the more 

righteous; by spending over his microscope evenings which would too 

probably have gradually been wasted at the theatre。  I have seen 

the young London beauty; amid all the excitement and temptation of 

luxury and flattery; with her heart pure and her mind occupied in a 

boudoir full of shells and fossils; flowers and sea…weeds; keeping 

herself unspotted from the world; by considering the lilies of the 

field; how they grow。  And therefore it is that I hail with 

thankfulness every fresh book of Natural History; as a fresh boon 

to the young; a fresh help to those who have to educate them。



The greatest difficulty in the way of beginners is (as in most 

things) how 〃to learn the art of learning。〃  They go out; search; 

find less than they expected; and give the subject up in 

disappointment。  It is good to begin; therefore; if possible; by 

playing the part of 〃jackal〃 to some practised naturalist; who will 

show the tyro where to look; what to look for; and; moreover; what 

it is that he has found; often no easy matter to discover。  Forty 

years ago; during an autumn's work of dead…leaf…searching in the 

Devon woods for poor old Dr。 Turton; while he was writing his book 

on British land…shells; the present writer learnt more of the art 

of observing than he would have learnt in three years' desultory 

hunting on his own account; and he has often regretted that no 

naturalist has established shore…lectures at some watering…place; 

like those up hill and down dale field…lectures which; in pleasant 

bygone Cambridge days; Professor Sedgwick used to give to young 

geologists; and Professor Henslow to young botanists。



In the meanwhile; to show you something of what may be seen by 

those who care to see; let me take you; in imagination; to a shore 

where I was once at home; and for whose richness I can vouch; and 

choose our season and our day to start forth; on some glorious 

September or October morning; to see what last night's equinoctial 

gale has swept from the populous shallows of Torbay; and cast up; 

high and dry; on Paignton sands。



Torbay is a place which should be as much endeared to the 

naturalist as to the patriot and to the artist。  We cannot gaze on 

its blue ring of water; and the great limestone bluffs which bound 

it to the north and south; without a glow passing through our 

hearts; as we remember the terrible and glorious pagea
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