登陆注册
20031900000159

第159章 LXXI.(4)

They saw what a beautiful town that was for a boy to grow up in, and how many privileges it offered, how many dangers, how many chances for hairbreadth escapes. They chose that Heine must often have rushed shrieking joyfully down that foul alley to the Rhine with other boys; and they easily found a leaf-strewn stretch of the sluggish Dussel, in the Public Garden, where his playmate, the little Wilhelm, lost his life and saved the kitten's. They were not so sure of the avenue through which the poet saw the Emperor Napoleon come riding on his small white horse when he took possession of the Elector's dominions. But if it was that where the statue of the Kaiser Wilhelm I. comes riding on a horse led by two Victories, both poet and hero are avenged there on the accomplished fact. Defeated and humiliated France triumphs in the badness of that foolish denkmal (one of the worst in all denkmal-ridden Germany), and the memory of the singer whom the Hohenzollern family pride forbids honor in his native place, is immortal in its presence.

On the way back to their hotel, March made some reflections upon the open neglect, throughout Germany, of the greatest German lyrist, by which the poet might have profited if he had been present. He contended that it was not altogether an effect of Hohenzollern pride, which could not suffer a joke or two from the arch-humorist; but that Heine had said things of Germany herself which Germans might well have found unpardonable. He concluded that it would not do to be perfectly frank with one's own country. Though, to be sure, there would always be the question whether the Jew-born Heine had even a step-fatherland in the Germany he loved so tenderly and mocked so pitilessly. He had to own that if he were a negro poet he would not feel bound to measure terms in speaking of America, and he would not feel that his fame was in her keeping.

Upon the whole he blamed Heine less than Germany and he accused her of taking a shabby revenge, in trying to forget him; in the heat of his resentment that there should be no record of Heine in the city where he was born, March came near ignoring himself the fact that the poet Freiligrath was also born there. As for the famous Dusseldorf school of painting, which once filled the world with the worst art, he rejoiced that it was now so dead, and he grudged the glance which the beauty of the new Art Academy extorted from him. It is in the French taste, and is so far a monument to the continuance in one sort of that French supremacy, of which in another sort another denkmal celebrates the overthrow. Dusseldorf is not content with the denkmal of the Kaiser on horseback, with the two Victories for grooms; there is a second, which the Marches found when they strolled out again late in the afternoon. It is in the lovely park which lies in the heart of the city, and they felt in its presence the only emotion of sympathy which the many patriotic monuments of Germany awakened in them. It had dignity and repose, which these never had elsewhere; but it was perhaps not so much for the dying warrior and the pitying lion of the sculpture that their hearts were moved as for the gentle and mournful humanity of the inscription, which dropped into equivalent English verse in March's note-book:

Fame was enough for the Victors, and glory and verdurous laurel;

Tears by their mothers wept founded this image of stone.

To this they could forgive the vaunting record, on the reverse, of the German soldiers who died heroes in the war with France, the war with Austria, and even the war with poor little Denmark!

The morning had been bright and warm, and it was just that the afternoon should be dim and cold, with a pale sun looking through a September mist, which seemed to deepen the seclusion and silence of the forest reaches; for the park was really a forest of the German sort, as parks are apt to be in Germany. But it was beautiful, and they strayed through it, and sometimes sat down on the benches in its damp shadows, and said how much seemed to be done in Germany for the people's comfort and pleasure. In what was their own explicitly, as well as what was tacitly theirs, they were not so restricted as we were at home, and especially the children seemed made fondly and lovingly free of all public things. The Marches met troops of them in the forest, as they strolled slowly back by the winding Dussel to the gardened avenue leading to the park, and they found them everywhere gay and joyful. But their elders seemed subdued, and were silent. The strangers heard no sound of laughter in the streets of Dusseldorf, and they saw no smiling except on the part of a very old couple, whose meeting they witnessed and who grinned and cackled at each other like two children as they shook hands. Perhaps they were indeed children of that sad second childhood which one would rather not blossom back into.

In America, life is yet a joke with us, even when it is grotesque and shameful, as it so often is; for we think we can make it right when we choose. But there is no joking in Germany, between the first and second childhoods, unless behind closed doors. Even there, people do not joke above their breath about kings and emperors. If they joke about them in print, they take out their laugh in jail, for the press laws are severely enforced, and the prisons are full of able editors, serious as well as comic. Lese-majesty is a crime that searches sinners out in every walk of life, and it is said that in family jars a husband sometimes has the last word of his wife by accusing her of blaspheming the sovereign, and so having her silenced for three months at least behind penitential bars.

"Think," said March, "how simply I could adjust any differences of opinion between us in Dusseldorf."

"Don't!" his wife implored with a burst of feeling which surprised him.

"I want to go home!"

They had been talking over their day, and planning their journey to Holland for the morrow, when it came to this outburst from her in the last half-hour before bed which they sat prolonging beside their stove.

"What! And not go to Holland? What is to become of my after-cure?"

"Oh, it's too late for that, now. We've used up the month running about, and tiring ourselves to death. I should like to rest a week--to get into my berth on the Norumbia and rest!"

"I guess the September gales would have something to say about that."

"I would risk the September gales."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 英雄联盟之超级召唤师

    英雄联盟之超级召唤师

    对手?呵呵,国内知名战队都被我血屠了日日夜夜,不过是笑话而已!你可知,我的铁锤下亡魂千千万万?你可知,我的荣耀在欢呼王的归来?你又可知,我怎么会只甘心于小兵的命呢?不逆天的系统,却是遇上了个逆天的宿主…
  • 不败魂帝

    不败魂帝

    “魂,人之根本。”“身如木,终有枯朽时,而魂如磐石,历轮回而不朽。有一类人,修己身之魂,逆苍天之意,不入轮回,成为世间强者,一念可翻山覆雨,一念可焚天煮海,飞天遁地,无所不能……”方浩重生在云山的一个小部落,三次融魂失败,成了人人嘲讽的废物。可是融魂只是一条竭泽而渔的歧路,既然融魂不成,那方浩就开启自己的魂之大道,成为魂修!走出云山,与五域天才争锋,逆苍天之意,成为魂道至尊!
  • 看不到的天际

    看不到的天际

    爱上你的时候你以离开.就让我为你守护这个你深爱的地方
  • 博心

    博心

    她不知道自己的心,面对他们,她不知如何是好,她不敢相信爱了这么却是自己意想不到的结果
  • 快穿撩汉

    快穿撩汉

    女主游戏人生,缺失情感,开始只享受过程之后结局只留下浓墨重彩的一笔。然后渴望细水长流并且不会腻歪的人生先是失败最后成功,投胎。********最幸福的贵在点点滴滴的那么正常自然,没有极大的喜悦也没有沉重的悲伤。只是一个普通人*******男主败笔,潘捏重生***************我们最相近的灵魂频率会让我们再次相遇。然后这一世完整了并且成为最幸福。
  • 都市之烟鬼来袭

    都市之烟鬼来袭

    ————————————————————————————————————极品【抽烟帝】重生,奇异天赋纵横都市,揽众花于怀。眷守千年爱恋,神仙姐姐再回首空闺独守千年;前世挚爱转世,今生形同陌路,又将何去何从?泪眼模糊,却是无言以对!佳人芳踪,何处可寻?前世今生身份之谜,为何引得多方势力关注。朝天大吼一声:我命由我不由人,不由天!与天斗,追求自由奥义;与地战,追寻生命真理;与SB斗,其乐无穷。————————————————————————————————————
  • 君拂

    君拂

    “为何我们明明就要成婚了,你却要将我送于他人。”“承欢,这本不是我心意,你要信我。”“我当然信你。”昨日长安一时繁华,今朝废墟荒芜一片。“你又骗我。”“我并未骗你,只是我是东决朝廷命官,你如今已是今元人了。”“所以我们像如今一般?”
  • 幻想兽

    幻想兽

    世界朝着荒诞无稽的方向演变,人与怪物缔结契约,诞生了具有幻兽之种的人类。当体内的怪物被唤醒,命运究竟谁来主宰?
  • 我的阴商之路

    我的阴商之路

    我丢了二十年的记忆,却招惹了鬼叔,当上了阴商。经历了百鬼淘宝,可是却因为郎老大的死鬼阴魂,我竟然淘到了一个老婆,而后一连串,到底是不是早就天注定的.....我的阴商命运开始淬火,燃烧的血脉让你看到不一样的嗣哥,十层异界之楼,每一层都是什么?我到底在为哪个孙子卖命。冰封的阴商数术,解封后,我得到是狂暴阴商的称呼?夏凌被夏枯仁赶出家门,一个没入世的小小赏金猎人和我这个离开鬼叔的小阴商,开始了怎么样的十层异界?我前二十年丢失的记忆,到底证明了我是什么???本书起点A签,保质保量的同时,欢迎各路读者大大们勾搭!
  • 破神

    破神

    异界大陆,强者为尊!她重生在这片热土,那就得好好把握!顶尖魔兽,绝世秘典,她视之如粪土!原因?她早已破开虚空,位列诸神!神界圣主因她而流连,魔界冥王为她而痴情!两个极端强者的男人,她该如何抉择?