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the ways of men-第7章

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icate and difficult combinations while a steamer was  sinking and the life…boats being manned?

Our grandfathers contributed the wooden nutmeg to  civilization; and endowed a grateful universe with other  money…saving devices。  To…day the inventor takes the American  baby from his cradle and does not release him even at the  grave。  What a treat one of the machine…made men of to…day  will be to the archeologists of the year 3000; when they  chance upon a well…preserved specimen; with all his patents  thick upon I him!  With a prophetic eye one can almost see the  kindly old gentleman of that day studying the paraphernalia  found in the tomb and attempting to account for the different  pieces。  Ink will flow and discussions rage between the camp  maintaining that cuff…holders were tutelar deities buried with  the dead by pious relatives and the croup asserting that the  little pieces of steel were a form of pocket money in the year  1900。  Both will probably misquote Tennyson and Kipling in  support of their theories。

The question has often been raised; What side of our  nineteenth…century civilization will be most admired by future  generations?  In view of the above facts there can remain  little doubt that when the secrets of the paper collar and the  trouser…stretcher have become lost arts; it will be those  benefits that remote ages will envy us; and rare specimens of  〃ventilated shoes〃 and 〃reversible tissue…paper undergarments〃  will form the choicest treasures of the collector。




Chapter 5 … Parnassus


MANY years ago; a gentleman with whom I was driving in a  distant quarter of Paris took me to a house on the rue  Montparnasse; where we remained an hour or more; he chatting  with its owner; and I listening to their conversation; and  wondering at the confusion of books in the big room。  As we  drove away; my companion turned to me and said; 〃Don't forget  this afternoon。  You have seen one of the greatest writers our  century has produced; although the world does not yet realize  it。  You will learn to love his works when you are older; and  it will be a satisfaction to remember that you saw and spoke  with him in the flesh! 〃

When I returned later to Paris the little house had changed  hands; and a marble tablet stating that Sainte…Beuve had lived  and died there adorned its facade。  My student footsteps took  me many times through that quiet street; but never without a  vision of the poet…critic flashing back; as I glanced up at  the window where he had stood and talked with us; as my friend  predicted; Sainte…Beuve's writings had become a precious part  of my small library; the memory of his genial face adding a  vivid interest to their perusal。

I made a little Pilgrimage recently to the quiet old garden  where; after many years' delay; a bust of this writer has been  unveiled; with the same companion; now very old; who thirty  years ago presented me to the original。

There is; perhaps; in all Paris no more exquisite corner than  the Garden of the Luxembourg。  At every season it is  beautiful。  The winter sunlight seems to linger on its stately  Italian terraces after it has ceased to shine elsewhere。  The  first lilacs bloom here in the spring; and when midsummer has  turned all the rest of Paris into a blazing; white wilderness;  these gardens remain cool and tranquil in the heart of  turbulent 〃Bohemia;〃 a bit of fragrant nature filled with the  song of birds and the voices of children。  Surely it was a  gracious inspiration that selected this shady park as the  〃Poets' Corner〃 of great; new Paris。  Henri Murger; Leconte de  Lisle; Theodore de Banville; Paul Verlaine; are here; and now  Sainte…Beuve has come back to his favorite haunt。  Like  Francois Coppee and Victor Hugo; he loved these historic  ALLEES; and knew the stone in them as he knew the 〃Latin  Quater;〃 for his life was passed between the bookstalls of the  quays and the outlying street where he lived。

As we sat resting in the shade; my companion; who had been one  of Sainte…Beuve's pupils; fell to talking of his master; his  memory refreshed by the familiar surroundings。  〃Can anything  be sadder;〃 he said; 〃than finding a face one has loved turned  into stone; or names that were the watch…words of one's youth  serving as signs at street corners … la rue Flaubert or  Theodore de Banville?  How far away they make the past seem!   Poor Sainte…Beuve; that bust yonder is but a poor reward for a  life of toil; a modest tribute to his encyclopaedic brain!   His works; however; are his best monument; he would be the  last to repine or cavil。

〃The literary world of my day had two poles; between which it  vibrated。  The little house in the rue Montparnasse was one;  the rock of Guernsey the other。  We spoke with awe of ‘Father  Hugo' and mentioned ‘Uncle Beuve' with tenderness。  The  Goncourt brothers accepted Sainte…Beuve's judgment on their  work as the verdict of a ‘Supreme Court。'  Not a poet or  author of that day but climbed with a beating heart the narrow  staircase that led to the great writer's library。  Paul  Verlaine regarded as his literary diploma a letter from this  ‘Balzac de la critique。' 〃

〃At the entrance of the quaint Passage du Commerce; under the  arch that leads into the rue Saint…Andre…des…Arts; stands a  hotel; where for years Sainte…Beuve came daily to work (away  from the importunate who besieged his dwelling) in a room  hired under the assumed name of Delorme。  It was there that we  sent him a basket of fruit one morning addressed to Mr。  Delorme; NE Sainte…Beuve。  It was there that most of his  enormous labor was accomplished。

〃A curious corner of old Paris that Cour du Commerce!  Just  opposite his window was the apartment where Danton lived。  If  one chose to seek for them it would not be hard to discover on  the pavement of this same passage the marks made by a young  doctor in decapitating sheep with his newly invented machine。   The doctor's name was Guillotin。

〃The great critic loved these old quarters filled with  history。  He was fond of explaining that Montparnasse had been  a hill where the students of the seventeenth and eighteenth  centuries came to amuse themselves。  In 1761 the slope was  levelled and the boulevard laid out; but the name was  predestined; he would declare; for the habitation of the  ‘Parnassiens。'

〃His enemies pretended that you had but to mention Michelet;  Balzac; and Victor Hugo to see Sainte…Beuve in three degrees  of rage。  He had; it is true; distinct expressions on hearing  those authors discussed。  The phrase then much used in  speaking of an original personality; ‘He is like a character  out of Balzac;' always threw my master into a temper。  I  cannot remember; however; having seen him in one of those  famous rages which made Barbey d'Aurevilly say that ‘Sainte… Beuve was a clever man with the temper of a turkey!'  The  former was much nearer the truth when he called the author of  LES LUNDIS a French Wordsworth; or compared him to a lay  BENEDICTIN。  He had a way of reading a newly acquired volume  as he walked through the streets that was typical of his life。   My master was always studying and always advancing。

〃He never entirely recovered from his 
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