登陆注册
19812600000012

第12章 RECOLLECTIONS OF ROBERT LOUIS STEVENSONTUSITALA(1)

We spoke of a rest in a Fairy hill of the north, but he Far from the firths of the east and the racing tides of the west Sleeps in the sight and the sound of the infinite southern sea, Weary and well content, in his grave on the Vaea crest.

Tusitala, the lover of children, the teller of tales, Giver of counsel and dreams, a wonder, a world's delight, Looks o'er the labour of men in the plain and the hill, and the sails Pass and repass on the sea that he loved, in the day and the night.

Winds of the west and the east in the rainy season blow, Heavy with perfume, and all his fragrant woods are wet, Winds of the east and the west as they wander to and fro, Bear him the love of the lands he loved, and the long regret.

Once we were kindest, he said, when leagues of the limitless sea, Flowed between us, but now that no range of the refluent tides Sunders us each from each, yet nearer we seem to be, When only the unbridged stream of the River of Death divides.

Before attempting to give any "reminiscences" of Mr. Stevenson, it is right to observe that reminiscences of him can best be found in his own works. In his essay on "Child's Play," and in his "Child's Garden of Verse," he gave to the world his vivid recollections of his imaginative infancy. In other essays he spoke of his boyhood, his health, his dreams, his methods of work and study. "The Silverado Squatters" reveals part of his experience in America.

The Parisian scenes in "The Wrecker" are inspired by his sojourn in French Bohemia; his journeys are recorded in "Travels with a Donkey" and "An Inland Voyage"; while his South Sea sketches, which appeared in periodicals, deal with his Oceanic adventures. He was the most autobiographical of authors, with an egoism nearly as complete, and to us as delightful, as the egoism of Montaigne.

Thus, the proper sources of information about the author of "Kidnapped" are in his delightful books.

"John's own John," as Dr. Holmes says, may be very unlike his neighbour's John; but in the case of Mr. Stevenson, his Louis was very similar to my Louis; I mean that, as he presents his personality to the world in his writings, even so did that personality appear to me in our intercourse. The man I knew was always a boy.

"Sing me a song of the lad that is gone,"he wrote about Prince Charlie, but in his own case the lad was never "gone." Like Keats and Shelley, he was, and he looked, of the immortally young. He and I were at school together, but I was an elderly boy of seventeen, when he was lost in the crowd of "gytes," as the members of the lowest form are called. Like all Scotch people, we had a vague family connection; a great-uncle of his, I fancy, married an aunt of my own, called for her beauty, "The Flower of Ettrick." So we had both heard; but these things were before our day. A lady of my kindred remembers carrying Stevenson about when he was "a rather peevish baby," and I have seen a beautiful photograph of him, like one of Raffael's children, taken when his years were three or four. But I never had heard of his existence till, in 1873, I think, I was at Mentone, in the interests of my health. Here I met Mr. Sidney Colvin, now of the British Museum, and, with Mr. Colvin, Stevenson. He looked as, in my eyes, he always did look, more like a lass than a lad, with a rather long, smooth oval face, brown hair worn at greater length than is common, large lucid eyes, but whether blue or brown Icannot remember, if brown, certainly light brown. On appealing to the authority of a lady, I learn that brown WAS the hue. His colour was a trifle hectic, as is not unusual at Mentone, but he seemed, under his big blue cloak, to be of slender, yet agile frame. He was like nobody else whom I ever met. There was a sort of uncommon celerity in changing expression, in thought and speech.

His cloak and Tyrolese hat (he would admit the innocent impeachment) were decidedly dear to him. On the frontier of Italy, why should he not do as the Italians do? It would have been well for me if I could have imitated the wearing of the cloak!

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 都市之最强大神

    都市之最强大神

    【都市火爆新书】一场奇遇我的人生改变了不光变成了大帅比,还变成了超级天才医术,赚钱,无所不能从此我发誓,要做这世界上最强,最拽的男人!
  • 复仇天使的恋爱

    复仇天使的恋爱

    正,邪。在一念之间。母亲的去世,后妈的、姐姐的欺辱,让天使般的她们,心中充满仇恨。在复仇的路上她们遇上了真爱,她们会不会为她们放弃复仇呢?
  • about肖骁

    about肖骁

    看完节目后随手写的,算是随笔吧,感慨自己感慨肖骁
  • 噬灵融天决

    噬灵融天决

    我到底是谁……是夺舍亦或者重生……天寒大陆吾将在凌……
  • 希诺奥特曼之黑白世代

    希诺奥特曼之黑白世代

    梦想的暧昧与牵绊,创造于宇宙最伟大的神,也注视着世间最渺小的人。
  • 宠爱夺心:野性警花小妻难驯服

    宠爱夺心:野性警花小妻难驯服

    《宠文》他:冷叶叶,你是我的心我的肝,我生命的四分之三她:我是你大爷,便是一脚踢向他下腹,他随之握住他脚踝,拉她入怀..........一次错睡,专横霸道有权有势被外界谣传有隐疾的他竟食髓知味,从此上瘾。摇身变成她警校的恶教官第一次她:滚,废材,便是一脚踢向他的要害。他:步步逼近,我让你看看什么才叫真正的废材.....第二次她:滚,流氓他:他邪魅的笑,你和我滚,然后便一个擒拿手将她臣服于身下....第三次她:你再靠近我不客气了....他:他无耻的笑,我就喜欢你的不客气....她一个堂堂的警花,竟被一个无耻的男人征服,他的绝招却是对她无止境的爱宠。
  • 重生之绝品影后

    重生之绝品影后

    上一世被安排的明明白白,这一世定要把自由掌握在自己的手中,既然天都要我重来一次,我一定会活出另一番的风采!
  • 超猴医学院

    超猴医学院

    6550万年以后的人,在智慧和科技上,远远比我们高明。他们回首看今天的我们,会如何评论呢?肯定会说我们是“人面猴心”。虽然大脑十分发达,但是与猴的思维模式相同,突出特征就是“以自我为中心”看周围世界。再说,人与猴在“吃食”和“生子”方面只有花样的不同,本质上并没有真正分道扬镳。所以,今天全人类的文化、哲学、科学、医学等等方面明显残留着猴的局限性。猴说真,人说假,猴捧为科学真理的东西,人说那是些虚假的谎言。死抱着一颗猴心很难超越猴的障碍。因此,有必要创办一所超级医学院超度众猴超越局限性,即是这部《超猴医学院》。