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the ways of men-第31章

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only this month that he  had papers in his possession showing beyond a doubt that I  might claim a certain King McDougal of Scotland for an  ancestor。  I have misgivings; however; as to the quality of  the royal blood in my veins; for the same correspondent was  equally confident six months ago that my people came in direct  line from Charlemagne。  As I have no desire to 〃corner〃 the  market in kings; these letters have remained unanswered。

Considering the mania to trace descent from illustrious men;  it astonishes me that a Mystic Band; consisting of lineal  descendants from the Seven Sages of Greece; has not before now  burst upon an astonished world。  It has been suggested that if  some one wanted to organize a truly restricted circle; 〃The  Grandchildren of our Tripoli War〃 would be an excellent title。   So few Americans took part in that conflict … and still fewer  know anything about it … that the satisfaction of joining the  society would be immense to exclusively…minded people。

There is only one explanation that seems in any way to account  for this vast tomfoolery。  A little sentence; printed at the  bottom of a prospectus recently sent to me; lets the ambitious  cat out of the genealogical bag。  It states that 〃social  position is assured to people joining our order。〃  Thanks to  the idiotic habit some newspapers have inaugurated of  advertising; gratis; a number of self…elected society  〃leaders;〃 many feeble…minded people; with more ambition than  cash; and a larger supply of family papers than brains; have  been bitten with a social madness; and enter these traps;  thinking they are the road to position and honors。  The number  of fools is larger than one would have believed possible; if  the success of so many 〃orders;〃 〃circles;〃 〃commanderies;〃  and 〃regencies〃 were not there to testify to the unending  folly of the would…be 〃smart。〃

This last decade of the century has brought to light many  strange fads and senseless manias。  This 〃descent〃 craze;  however; surpasses them all in inanity。  The keepers of insane  asylums will tell you that one of the hopeless forms of  madness is LA FOLIE DES GRANDEURS。  A breath of this delirium  seems to be blowing over our country。  Crowns and sceptres  haunt the dreams of simple republican men and women; troubling  their slumbers and leading them a will…o'…the…wisp dance back  across the centuries。




Chapter 20 … As the Twig is Bent


I KNEW; in my youth; a French village far up among the  Cevennes Mountains; where the one cultivated man of the place;  saddened by the unlovely lives of the peasants around him and  by the bare walls of the village school; organized evening  classes for the boys。  During these informal hours; he talked  to them of literature and art and showed them his prints and  paintings。  When the youths' interest was aroused he lent them  books; that they might read about the statues and buildings  that had attracted their attention。  At first it appeared a  hopeless task to arouse any interest among these peasants in  subjects not bearing on their abject lives。  To talk with boys  of the ideal; when their poor bodies were in need of food and  raiment; seemed superfluous; but in time the charm worked; as  it always will。  The beautiful appealed to their simple  natures; elevating and refining them; and opening before their  eager eyes perspectives of undreamed…of interest。  The self… imposed task became a delight as his pupils' minds responded  to his efforts。  Although death soon ended his useful life;  the seed planted grew and bore fruit in many humble homes。

At this moment I know men in several walks of life who revere  with touching devotion the memory of the one human being who  had brought to them; at the moment when they were most  impressionable; the gracious message that existence was not  merely a struggle for bread。  The boys he had gathered around  him realize now that the encouragement and incentive received  from those evening glimpses of noble works existing in the  world was the mainspring of their subsequent development and a  source of infinite pleasure through all succeeding years。

This reference to an individual effort toward cultivating the  poor has been made because other delicate spirits are  attempting some such task in our city; where quite as much as  in the French village schoolchildren stand in need of some  message of beauty in addition to the instruction they receive;  … some window opened for them; as it were; upon the fields of  art; that their eyes when raised from study or play may rest  on objects more inspiring than blank walls and the graceless  surroundings of street or schoolroom。

We are far too quick in assuming that love of the beautiful is  confined to the highly educated; that the poor have no desire  to surround themselves with graceful forms and harmonious  colors。  We wonder at and deplore their crude standards;  bewailing the general lack of taste and the gradual reducing  of everything to a commonplace money basis。  We smile at the  efforts toward adornment attempted by the poor; taking it too  readily for granted that on this point they are beyond  redemption。  This error is the less excusable as so little has  been done by way of experiment before forming an opinion; …  whole classes being put down as inferior beings; incapable of  appreciation; before they have been allowed even a glimpse of  the works of art that form the daily mental food of their  judges。

The portly charlady who rules despotically in my chambers is  an example。  It has been a curious study to watch her growing  interest in the objects that have here for the first time come  under her notice; the delight she has come to take in dusting  and arranging my belongings; and her enthusiasm at any new  acquisition。  Knowing how bare her own home was; I felt at  first only astonishment at her vivid interest in what seemed  beyond her comprehension; but now realize that in some blind  way she appreciates the rare and the delicate quite as much as  my more cultivated visitors。  At the end of one laborious  morning; when everything was arranged to her satisfaction; she  turned to me her poor; plain face; lighted up with an  expression of delight; and exclaimed; 〃Oh; sir; I do love to  work in these rooms!  I'm never so happy as when I'm arranging  them elegant things!〃  And; although my pleasure in her  pleasure was modified by the discovery that she had taken an  eighteenth…century comb to disentangle the fringes of a rug;  and broken several of its teeth in her ardor; that she  invariably placed a certain Whister etching upside down; and  then stood in rapt admiration before it; still; in watching  her enthusiasm; I felt a thrill of satisfaction at seeing how  her untaught taste responded to a contact with good things。

Here in America; and especially in our city; which we have  been at such pains to make as hideous as possible; the  schoolrooms; where hundreds of thousands of children pass many  hours daily; are one degree more graceless than the town  itself; the most artistically inclined child can hardly  receive any but unfortunate impressions。  The other day a  friend took me severely to task for rating our A
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