the letters-1-第27部分
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being。
Received James's HAWTHORNE; on which I meditate a blast; Miss Bird;
Dixon's PENN; a WRONG CORNHILL (like my luck) and COQUELIN: for
all which; and especially the last; I tender my best thanks。 I
have opened only James; it is very clever; very well written; and
out of sight the most inside…out thing in the world; I have dug up
the hatchet; a scalp shall flutter at my belt ere long。 I think my
new book should be good; it will contain our adventures for the
summer; so far as these are worth narrating; and I have already a
few pages of diary which should make up bright。 I am going to
repeat my old experiment; after buckling…to a while to write more
correctly; lie down and have a wallow。 Whether I shall get any of
my novels done this summer I do not know; I wish to finish the
VENDETTA first; for it really could not come after PRINCE OTTO。
Lewis Campbell has made some noble work in that Agamemnon; it
surprised me。 We hope to get a house at Silverado; a deserted
mining…camp eight miles up the mountain; now solely inhabited by a
mighty hunter answering to the name of Rufe Hansome; who slew last
year a hundred and fifty deer。 This is the motto I propose for the
new volume: 'VIXERUNT NONNULLI IN AGRIS; DELECTATI RE SUA
FAMILIARI。 HIS IDEM PROPOSITUM FUIT QUOD REGIBUS; UT NE QUA RE
EGERENT; NE CUI PARERENT; LIBERTATE UTERENTUR; CUJUS PROPRIUM EST
SIC VIVERE UT VELIS。' I always have a terror lest the wish should
have been father to the translation; when I come to quote; but that
seems too plain sailing。 I should put REGIBUS in capitals for the
pleasantry's sake。 We are in the Coast Range; that being so much
cheaper to reach; the family; I hope; will soon follow。 … Love to
all; ever yours;
R。 L。 S。
CHAPTER V … ALPINE WINTERS AND HIGHLAND SUMMERS; AUGUST 1880…
OCTOBER 1882
Letter: TO A。 G。 DEW…SMITH
'HOTEL BELVEDERE; DAVOS; NOVEMBER 1880。'
Figure me to yourself; I pray …
A man of my peculiar cut …
Apart from dancing and deray;
Into an Alpine valley shut;
Shut in a kind of damned Hotel;
Discountenanced by God and man;
The food? … Sir; you would do as well
To cram your belly full of bran。
The company? Alas; the day
That I should dwell with such a crew;
With devil anything to say;
Nor any one to say it to!
The place? Although they call it Platz;
I will be bold and state my view;
It's not a place at all … and that's
The bottom verity; my Dew。
There are; as I will not deny;
Innumerable inns; a road;
Several Alps indifferent high;
The snow's inviolable abode;
Eleven English parsons; all
Entirely inoffensive; four
True human beings … what I call
Human … the deuce a cipher more;
A climate of surprising worth;
Innumerable dogs that bark;
Some air; some weather; and some earth;
A native race … God save the mark! …
A race that works; yet cannot work;
Yodels; but cannot yodel right;
Such as; unhelp'd; with rusty dirk;
I vow that I could wholly smite。
A river that from morn to night
Down all the valley plays the fool;
Not once she pauses in her flight;
Nor knows the comfort of a pool;
But still keeps up; by straight or bend;
The selfsame pace she hath begun …
Still hurry; hurry; to the end …
Good God; is that the way to run?
If I a river were; I hope
That I should better realise
The opportunities and scope
Of that romantic enterprise。
I should not ape the merely strange;
But aim besides at the divine;
And continuity and change
I still should labour to combine。
Here should I gallop down the race;
Here charge the sterling like a bull;
There; as a man might wipe his face;
Lie; pleased and panting; in a pool。
But what; my Dew; in idle mood;
What prate I; minding not my debt?
What do I talk of bad or good?
The best is still a cigarette。
Me whether evil fate assault;
Or smiling providences crown …
Whether on high the eternal vault
Be blue; or crash with thunder down …
I judge the best; whate'er befall;
Is still to sit on one's behind;
And; having duly moistened all;
Smoke with an unperturbed mind。
R。 L。 S。
Letter: TO THOMAS STEVENSON
'HOTEL BELVEDERE'; DAVOS; DECEMBER 12 '1880'。
MY DEAR FATHER; … Here is the scheme as well as I can foresee。 I
begin the book immediately after the '15; as then began the attempt
to suppress the Highlands。
I。 THIRTY YEARS' INTERVAL
(1) Rob Roy。
(2) The Independent Companies: the Watches。
(3) Story of Lady Grange。
(4) The Military Roads; and Disarmament: Wade and
(5) Burt。
II。 THE HEROIC AGE
(1) Duncan Forbes of Culloden。
(2) Flora Macdonald。
(3) The Forfeited Estates; including Hereditary Jurisdictions; and
the admirable conduct of the tenants。
III。 LITERATURE HERE INTERVENES
(1) The Ossianic Controversy。
(2) Boswell and Johnson。
(3) Mrs。 Grant of Laggan。
IV。 ECONOMY
(1) Highland Economics。
(2) The Reinstatement of the Proprietors。
(3) The Evictions。
(4) Emigration。
(5) Present State。
V。 RELIGION
(1) The Catholics; Episcopals; and Kirk; and Soc。 Prop。 Christ。
Knowledge。
(2) The Men。
(3) The Disruption。
All this; of course; will greatly change in form; scope; and order;
this is just a bird's…eye glance。 Thank you for BURT; which came;
and for your Union notes。 I have read one…half (about 900 pages)
of Wodrow's CORRESPONDENCE; with some improvement; but great
fatigue。 The doctor thinks well of my recovery; which puts me in
good hope for the future。 I should certainly be able to make a
fine history of this。
My Essays are going through the press; and should be out in January
or February。 … Ever affectionate son;
R。 L。 S。
Letter: TO EDMUND GOSSE
HOTEL BELVEDERE; DAVOS PLATZ 'DEC。 6; 1880'。
MY DEAR WEG; … I have many letters that I ought to write in
preference to this; but a duty to letters and to you prevails over
any private consideration。 You are going to collect odes; I could
not wish a better man to do so; but I tremble lest you should
commit two sins of omission。 You will not; I am sure; be so far
left to yourself as to give us no more of Dryden than the hackneyed
St。 Cecilia; I know you will give us some others of those
surprising masterpieces where there is more sustained eloquence and
harmony of English numbers than in all that has been written since;
there is a machine about a poetical young lady; and another about
either Charles or James; I know not which; and they are both
indescribably fine。 (Is Marvell's Horatian Ode good enough? I
half think so。) But my great point is a fear that you are one of
those who are unjust to our old Tennyson's Duke of Wellington。 I
have just been talking it over with Symonds; and we agreed that
whether for its metrical effects; for its brief; plain; stirring
words of portraiture; as … he 'that never lost an English gun;' or
… the soldier salute; or for the heroic apostrophe to Nelson; that
ode has never been surpassed in any tongue or time。 Grant me the
Duke; O Weg! I suppose you must not put in yours about the
warship; you will have to admit worse ones; however。 … Ever yours;
R。 L。 S。
Letter: TO EDMUND GOSSE
'HOTEL BELVEDERE'; DAVOS; DEC。 19; 1880。
This letter is a report of a long sederunt; also steterunt in small
committee at Davos Platz; Dec。 15; 1880。
Its results are unhesitatingly shot at your head。
MY DEAR WEG; … We both insist on the Duke of Wellington。 Really it
cannot be left out。 Symonds said you would cover yourself with
shame; and I add; your friends with confusion; if you leave it out。
Really; you know it is the only thing you have; since Dryden; where
that irregular odic; odal; odous (?) verse is used with mastery and
sense。 And it's one of our few English blood…boilers。
(2) Byron: if anything: PROMETHEUS。
(3) Shelley (1) THE WORLD'S GREAT AGE from Hellas; we are both dead
on。 After that you have; of course; THE WEST WIND thing。 But we
think (1) would maybe be enough; no more than two any way。
(4) Herrick。 MEDDOWES and COME; MY CORINNA。 After that MR。
WICKES: two any way。
(5) Leave out stanza 3rd of Congreve's thing; like a dear; we can't
stand the 'sigh' nor the 'peruke。'
(6) Milton。 TIME and the SOLEMN MUSIC。 We both agree we would
rather go without L'Allegro and Il Penseroso than these; for the
reason that these are not so well known to the brutish herd。
(7) Is the ROYAL GEORGE an ode; or only an elegy? It's so good。
(8) We leave Campbell to you。
(9) If you take anything from Clough; but we don't either of us
fancy you will; let it be COME BACK。
(10) Quite right about Dryden。 I had a hankering after THRENODIA
AUGUSTALIS; but I find it long and with very prosaic holes:
though; O! what fine stuff between whiles。
(11) Right with Collins。
(12) Right about Pope's Ode。 But what can you give? THE DYING
CHRISTIAN? or one of his inimitable courtesies? These last are
fairly odes; by the Horatian model; just as my dear MEDDOWES is an
ode in the name and for the sake of Bandusia。
(13) Whatever you do; you'll give us the Greek Vase。
(14) Do you like Jonson's 'loathed stage'? Verses 2; 3; and 4 are
so bad; also the last line。 But there is a fine movement and
feeling in the rest。
We will have the Duke of Wellington by God。 Pro Symonds and
Stevenson。
R。 L。 S。
Letter: TO CHARLES WARREN STODDARD
HOTEL BELVEDERE; DAVOS PLATZ; SWITZERLAND 'DECEMBER 1880'。
DEAR CHARLES WARREN STODDARD; … Many thanks to you for the letter
and the photograph。 Will you think it mean if I ask you to wait
till there appears a pro