登陆注册
20041600000028

第28章 CHAPTER Nature and Art(4)

Of the trio the first is altogether the most important. Indeed, to a Far Oriental, so fundamental a part of himself is his love of Nature that before we view its mirrored image it will be well to look the emotion itself in the face. The Far Oriental lives in a long day-dream of beauty. He muses rather than reasons, and all musing, so the word itself confesses, springs from the inspiration of a Muse. But this Muse appears not to him, as to the Greeks, after the fashion of a woman, nor even more prosaically after the likeness of a man. Unnatural though it seem to us, his inspiration seeks no human symbol. His Muse is not kin to mankind. She is too impersonal for any personification, for she is Nature.

That poet whose name carries with it a certain presumption of infallibility has told us that "the proper study of mankind is man;" and if material advancement in consequence be any criterion of the fitness of a particular mental pursuit, events have assuredly justified the saying. Indeed, the Levant has helped antithetically to preach the same lesson, in showing us by its own fatal example that the improper study of mankind is woman, and that they who but follow the fair will inevitably degenerate.

The Far Oriental knows nothing of either study, and cares less.

The delight of self-exploration, or the possibly even greater delight of losing one's self in trying to fathom femininity, is a sensation equally foreign to his temperament. Neither the remarkable persistence of one's own characteristics, not infrequently matter of deep regret to their possessor, nor the charmingly unaccountable variability of the fairer sex, at times quite as annoying, is a phenomenon sufficient to stir his curiosity. Accepting, as he does, the existing state of things more as a material fact than as a phase in a gradual process of development, he regards humanity as but a small part of the great natural world, instead of considering it the crowning glory of the whole. He recognizes man merely as a fraction of the universe,--one might almost say as a vulgar fraction of it, considering the low regard in which he is held,--and accords him his proportionate share of attention, and no more.

In his thought, nature is not accessory to man. Worthy M. Perichon, of prosaic, not to say philistinic fame, had, as we remember, his travels immortalized in a painting where a colossal Perichon in front almost completely eclipsed a tiny Mont Blanc behind. A Far Oriental thinks poetry, which may possibly account for the fact that in his mind-pictures the relative importance of man and mountain stands reversed. "The matchless Fuji," first of motifs in his art, admits no pilgrim as its peer.

Nor is it to woman that turn his thoughts. Mother Earth is fairer, in his eyes, than are any of her daughters. To her is given the heart that should be theirs. The Far Eastern love of Nature amounts almost to a passion. To the study of her ever varying moods her Japanese admirer brings an impersonal adoration that combines oddly the aestheticism of a poet with the asceticism of a recluse. Not that he worships in secret, however. His passion is too genuine either to find disguise or seek display. With us, unfortunately, the love of Nature is apt to be considered a mental extravagance peculiar to poets, excusable in exact ratio to the ability to give it expression. For an ordinary mortal to feel a fondness for Mother Earth is a kind of folly, to be carefully concealed from his fellows. A sort of shamefacedness prevents him from avowing it, as a boy at boarding-school hides his homesickness, or a lad his love.

He shrinks from appearing less pachydermatous than the rest.

Or else he flies to the other extreme, and affects the odd; pretends, poses, parades, and at last succeeds half in duping himself, half in deceiving other people. But with Far Orientals the case is different. Their love has all the unostentatious assurance of what has received the sanction of public opinion. Nor is it still at that doubtful, hesitating stage when, by the instrumentality of a third, its soul-harmony can suddenly be changed from the jubilant major key into the despairing minor. No trace of sadness tinges his delight. He has long since passed this melancholy phase of erotic misery, if so be that the course of his true love did not always run smooth, and is now well on in matrimonial bliss. The very look of the land is enough to betray the fact. In Japan the landscape has an air of domesticity about it, patent even to the most casual observer. Wherever the Japanese has come in contact with the country he has made her unmistakably his own. He has touched her to caress, not injure, and it seems as if Nature accepted his fondness as a matter of course, and yielded him a wifely submission in return.

His garden is more human, even, than his house. Not only is everything exquisitely in keeping with man, but natural features are actually changed, plastic to the imprint of their lord and master's mind. Bushes, shrubs, trees, forget to follow their original intent, and grow as he wills them to; now expanding in wanton luxuriance, now contracting into dwarf designs of their former selves, all to obey his caprice and please his eye. Even stubborn rocks lose their wildness, and come to seem a part of the almost sentient life around them. If the description of such dutifulness seems fanciful, the thing itself surpasses all supposition. Hedges and shrubbery, clipped into the most fantastic shapes, accept the suggestion of the pruning-knife as if man's wishes were their own whims. Manikin maples, Tom Thumb trees, a foot high and thirty years old, with all the gnarls and knots and knuckles of their fellows of the forest, grow in his parterres, their native vitality not a whit diminished.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 你的一切是我所有美好回忆

    你的一切是我所有美好回忆

    十岁之后没了爸爸,妈妈带着我改嫁给一位五十多岁的豪门老头,经常受二姐,三弟的冷嘲热讽,在这花样年华一样的年纪,我遇到了一个令我心动不止的少年,在我那苦涩的时光中,他,装满了我整颗心,究竟我与他的邂逅是物是人非还是涛声依旧?
  • 晚风集(卷二)

    晚风集(卷二)

    殷谦散文作品精品合集。其中不乏犀利的批评,怡人的观点,明智的思想。这五部作品从人生的各方面都有所涉及,或者通过故事,或者通过评论,形式各种,但可见作者独特的心境,让我们受益匪浅。
  • TFboYs

    TFboYs

    作者qq3039578418,群号342916735宇宙最复杂的爱恋上演!虽说复杂,但发展通俗易懂,不看你会后悔的~~这本关于tfboys的书可不像其他的一开始就在一起啦,需要历风雨,需要时间的摩擦,才会摩擦出感情。当然,皇冠还是戴在对她一见钟情的那名少年身上啦,那是谁呢?是那个她爱的高冷少年,还是那个暖心的薄荷少年,还是,那个一直在乎她的冷静少年?
  • 网游之紫青剑诀

    网游之紫青剑诀

    第三次世界大战终于不可避免的生了,甚至动用了核弹。地球面临核冬天,为了生存,人类凭借强悍的思感技术,并且将肉体冻在未受污染的南极大6最底层,除了必要的技术人员以外,全民进入了虚拟空间——《幻恋》。由于幻舞机器出现问题所以会出现一章很多重复的问题暂时幻舞还不怎么会解决~~很快幻舞就会把多余的章节删除~~给大家带来不便幻舞由衷的说声对不起也是重伤,没有办法在战斗了。
  • Dream Life and Real Life

    Dream Life and Real Life

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 无爱不成婚:何以暖心

    无爱不成婚:何以暖心

    爱一个人太久,让她忘记了怎样再爱,和梁默结婚三年,秦暖心自认她是一个守规矩的好妻子,如果没有意外,她也就愿意这样下去和他过一辈子得了。原以为一切会绕着正常的轨道行走,可人生又是谁能控制的?三年婚姻,到最后又是谁要了谁的心。习惯了另一个人的存在后,他们还能回到最初的自己吗?
  • 浮光掠影

    浮光掠影

    一个不知道天高地厚的小女孩,被一个老神医收养在山上,度过了十几年无忧无虑的生活,学习了各种学问却都无疾而终,最后还沦落成了一个小乞丐,整日靠着乞讨度日。好不容易又与最疼爱自己的三师兄重逢,结果又被贼人掳走,进了怡红院。她的命怎么那么苦?居然被掳走了一次还不够,居然还有第二次!这也太背了吧!不行!看她如何战胜重重美人,最后抱得师兄归!
  • 大药商

    大药商

    北有国医同仁堂,南有西药信宜大药房。鲍国安因参加游行被学校开除,步入上海十里洋行,混迹于洋人、买办间,从小小推销员做起,闯荡出自己的天地。信宜药厂,这个上海滩上响当当的民族西药品牌,与国运同进退,与民族共兴衰。国事家事,情孽姻缘,战乱之中,演绎了一代“大药商”的曲折历程……
  • 都市隐世高手

    都市隐世高手

    他是预言之子,出身平凡却又不平凡。亲情被毁、红颜远去让他不得不一步步变强!为了夺回至爱,他不惜掀开尘封多年之禁忌,从此花花都市再次风起云涌,旧恨未泯,新怨又生...然而对于遁入魔门的他来说,神马天才,世家,门派…一切都是浮云,票子是我的,妹子也是我的,通通都是我的...
  • 嚣张宝贝腹黑娘亲

    嚣张宝贝腹黑娘亲

    二十一世纪无敌宅女意外穿越后,发现自己竟未婚先孕。跟宝贝儿子游历江湖,救下武林秘籍《凌家谱》的主人,母子卷入江湖纷争。为争夺《凌家谱》,成为武林盟主,江湖一时掀起腥风血雨,而孩子亲爹的秘密也在无意中被揭晓。同样身为玄气高手的他和她的儿子,体内蕴含着极深厚的玄气,更有小神兽石头护身,却成为制敌的关键所在!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】