登陆注册
20049100000014

第14章 HAVE PATIENCE, LITTLE SAINT(2)

In nothing do we show how far the West is from the East so emphatically as we show it by our lofty ways towards those who so manifestly put themselves at our feet. It is certainly not pleasant to see them there; but silence or a storm of impersonal protest--a protest that appeals vaguely less to the beggars than to some not impossible police--does not seem the most appropriate manner of rebuking them. We have, it may be, a scruple on the point of human dignity, compromised by the entreaty and the thanks of the mendicant; but we have a strange way of vindicating that dignity when we refuse to man, woman, or child the recognition of a simply human word. Nay, our offence is much the greater of the two. It is not merely a rough and contemptuous intercourse, it is the refusal of intercourse--the last outrage. How do we propose to redress those conditions of life that annoy us when a brother whines, if we deny the presence, the voice, and the being of this brother, and if, because fortune has refused him money, we refuse him existence?

We take the matter too seriously, or not seriously enough, to hold it in the indifference of the wise. "Have patience, little saint," is a phrase that might teach us the cheerful way to endure our own unintelligible fortunes in the midst, say, of the population of a hill-village among the most barren of the Maritime Alps, where huts of stone stand among the stones of an unclothed earth, and there is no sign of daily bread. The people, albeit unused to travellers, yet know by instinct what to do, and beg without the delay of a moment as soon as they see your unwonted figure. Let it be taken for granted that you give all you can; some form of refusal becomes necessary at last, and the gentlest--it is worth while to remember-- is the most effectual. An indignant tourist, one who to the portent of a puggaree which, perhaps, he wears on a grey day, adds that of ungovernable rage, is so wild a visitor that no attempt at all is made to understand him; and the beggars beg dismayed but unalarmed, uninterruptedly, without a pause or a conjecture. They beg by rote, thinking of something else, as occasion arises, and all indifferent to the violence of the rich.

It is the merry beggar who has so lamentably disappeared. If a beggar is still merry anywhere, he hides away what it would so cheer and comfort us to see; he practises not merely the conventional seeming, which is hardly intended to convince, but a more subtle and dramatic kind of semblance, of no good influence upon the morals of the road. He no longer trusts the world with a sight of his gaiety.

He is not a wholehearted mendicant, and no longer keeps that liberty of unstable balance whereby an unattached creature can go in a new direction with a new wind. The merry beggar was the only adventurer free to yield to the lighter touches of chance, the touches that a habit of resistance has made imperceptible to the seated and stable social world.

The visible flitting figure of the unfettered madman sprinkled our literature with mad songs, and even one or two poets of to-day have, by tradition, written them; but that wild source of inspiration has been stopped; it has been built over, lapped and locked, imprisoned, led underground. The light melancholy and the wind-blown joys of the song of the distraught, which the poets were once ingenious to capture, have ceased to sound one note of liberty in the world's ears. But it seems that the grosser and saner freedom of the happy beggar is still the subject of a Spanish song.

That song is gay, not defiant it is not an outlaw's or a robber's, it is not a song of violence or fear. It is the random trolling note of a man who owes his liberty to no disorder, failure, or ill- fortune, but takes it by choice from the voluntary world, enjoys it at the hand of unreluctant charity; who twits the world with its own choice of bonds, but has not broken his own by force. It seems, therefore, the song of an indomitable liberty of movement, light enough for the puffs of a zephyr chance.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 平静的水潭下

    平静的水潭下

    茫茫的水潭,看似十分平静,实际上,在这平静的水潭下,却是波涛汹涌,汹涌澎湃!让我们携手走进这平静的水潭,领略其中无限魅力!
  • 撼苍茫

    撼苍茫

    天若赐予我辉煌、我必比天更嚣张。谁无虎落平阳日,待我风云再起时。有朝一日龙得水,我叫长江水逆流。有朝一日虎归山,我定血染半边天。既然这世界没有规则,不如有我创造!
  • 仙侠版大清末年

    仙侠版大清末年

    鸦片战争的失败,是天朝没落的开始,或许在那么一个不为人知的地方,或许会有着无数传说中的剑仙侠客,修真者们在为国家暗暗的奋斗,或许他们也在另一个战场抛头颅洒热血,而我想写的,就是这样一个战场......1840年,传承自神魔时代的大清王朝屹立世界之巅五千多年的古老王朝终于遭受到了致命的打击,火器将无数武者击败,修真者们无法神魂出窍,火炮威力无穷,阳气刚重。1839年,武道宗师黄天受人托付,护送林则徐前往广州参与禁烟,此时此刻,他万万想想不到,一场百年浩劫即将袭来,而他,也将成为这场浩劫中的一枚棋子。
  • 妃你莫属:王爷请娶我

    妃你莫属:王爷请娶我

    他是王爷了怎么了,只要她喜欢,他就得娶她,什么公主什么圣女,她都不要管,因为爱上了,谁也不能来阻止,哪怕是父王母后,哪怕是王公大臣,哪怕是三纲五常,只要她喜欢就够了,只要他答应就够了,爱是两个人的事,就算真的到了那个时候,她会嫁的,但那人必须是…
  • 只因蝶舞

    只因蝶舞

    【子亦舞影】网文室首推蝶虐系列文章【短篇】【扯痛了伤口,浑然不觉,只因这世间有你,蝶舞,翩跹,悄而无声】【诗词、短篇、古微】
  • 女王

    女王

    我没有想到末世真的会来临。全球物种变异,气候异常,文明崩塌,人类瞬间跌入食物链底端。作为一个普通女人,我该如何在这个‘新世界’生存下去?柔弱的女人,在这个末世,要么成为猎物,要么沦为玩物。我该怎么选?不!我都不选!我不仅想活下去,还想自由自在的活下去!为此,我将永不放弃!
  • 我的晨青梅我的辰竹马

    我的晨青梅我的辰竹马

    林晨,林辰。都是linchen却性别不同,外貌不同,性格不同,人缘不同,各种不同。但两人却是一起长大,比谁都了解彼此......当二人因为长大分道扬镳后又再次重逢,埋藏在心底的那份情系再次放大。或许有一种人,上帝一早就安排在你的身边,让她来折磨你,她就是你的克星。
  • 最强修仙系统

    最强修仙系统

    一颗神秘骰子带着一位现代赌神穿越修仙世界,逆天改运成赌仙,骰子摇一摇,法宝丹药通通来,来来来,这位道友,我们赌一把。
  • 不朽家族

    不朽家族

    这片土地上发生过许多事情,有现在的,有久远的,在时间的转轮上,都已经慢慢的褪色……只有远方的游吟诗人还在不断的叙述着,这片大陆上勇者的传说……叙述着骑士的忠诚,剑士的豪迈,魔法师的传奇,佣兵的冒险,精灵的美貌,魔怪的邪恶,历久的战争,王国的更替,叙述着大陆上的历史。
  • 你的形象价值百万

    你的形象价值百万

    在日常交际,公司洽谈,商务签约时,个人的外在形象是不可忽视的一个因素,尤其是第一印象,在相互沟通时也是非常的重要,而一个的外在形象是一个人内在气质的表现,要想有一个良好的外在形象,并不是换两套衣服,换一个发型,或是化个妆那么简单的事情。本书从改变服饰——穿出成功的形象、改变肢体语言——化无形为力量、形成气质——抓住第一次机会、完美沟通——让你脱颖而出、文明礼仪——把小礼仪无限放大、塑造职场形象——改变一生命运,这六个方面,帮你塑造一个自信、大方、得体的全新的自我。