登陆注册
25637400000081

第81章

His alacrity was dreadful to me, his well-aimed blows fell on what was rather a bladder or a pillow than a vivid antagonist.

He was, indeed, most unfairly handicapped,--I was naked, he in a suit of chain armour,--for he had adopted a method which Ithought, and must still think, exceedingly unfair. He assumed that he had private knowledge of the Divine Will, and he would meet my temporizing arguments by asseverations,--'So sure as my God liveth!' or by appeals to a higher authority,--'But what does my Lord tell me in Paul's Letter to the Philippians?' It was the prerogative of his faith to know, and of his character to overpower objection; between these two millstones I was rapidly ground to powder.

These 'discussions', as they were rather ironically called, invariably ended for me in disaster. I was driven out of my papier-mache fastnesses, my canvas walls rocked at the first peal from my Father's clarion, and the foe pursued me across the plains of Jericho until I lay down ignominiously and covered my face. I seemed to be pushed with horns of iron, such as those which Zedekiah the son of Chenaanah prepared for the encouragement of Ahab.

When I acknowledged defeat and cried for quarter, my Father would become radiant, and I still seem to hear the sound of his full voice, so thrilling, so warm, so painful to my over-strained nerves, bursting forth in a sort of benediction at the end of each of these one-sided contentions, with 'I bow my knees unto the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, that He would grant you, according to the riches of His glory, to be strengthened with might by His Spirit in the inner man; that Christ may dwell in your heart by faith; that you, being rooted and grounded in love, may be able to comprehend with all saints what is the breadth, and length, and depth, and height, and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge, that you might be filled with the fullness of God.'

Thus solemn and thus ceremonious was my Father apt to become, without a moment's warning, on plain and domestic occasions;abruptly brimming over with emotion like a basin which an unseen flow of water has filled and over-filled.

I earnestly desire that no trace of that absurd self-pity which is apt to taint recollections of this nature should give falsity to mine. My Father, let me say once more, had other interests than those of his religion. In particular, at this time, he took to painting in water-colours in the open air, and he resumed the assiduous study of botany. He was no fanatical monomaniac.

Nevertheless, there was, in everything he did and said, the central purpose present. He acknowledged it plainly; 'with me,' he confessed, 'every question assumes a Divine standpoint and is not adequately answered if the judgement-seat of Christ is not kept in sight.'

This was maintained whether the subject under discussion was poetry, or society, or the Prussian war with Austria, or the stamen of a wild flower. Once, at least, he was himself conscious of the fatiguing effect on my temper of this insistency, for, raising his great brown eyes with a flash of laughter in them, he closed the Bible suddenly after a very lengthy disquisition, and quoted his Virgil to startling effect:--Claudite jam rivos, pueri: Sat prata biberunt.

The insistency of his religious conversation was, probably, the less incomprehensible to me on account of the evangelical training to which I had been so systematically subjected. It was, however, none the less intolerably irksome, and would have been exasperating, I believe, even to a nature in which a powerful and genuine piety was inherent. To my own, in which a feeble and imitative faith was expiring, it was deeply vexatious. It led, alas! to a great deal of bowing in the house of Rimmon, to much hypocritical ingenuity in drawing my Father's attention away, if possible, as the terrible subject was seen to be looming and approaching. In this my stepmother would aid and abet, sometimes producing incongruous themes, likely to attract my Father aside, with a skill worthy of a parlour conjurer, and much to my admiration. If, however, she was not unwilling to come, in this way, to the support of my feebleness, there was no open collusion between us. She always described my Father, when she was alone with me, admiringly, as one 'whose trumpet gave no uncertain sound'. There was not a tinge of infidelity upon her candid mind, but she was human, and I think that now and then she was extremely bored.

My Father was entirely devoid of the prudence which turns away its eyes and passes as rapidly as possible in the opposite direction. The peculiar kind of drama in which every sort of social discomfort is welcomed rather than that the characters should be happy when guilty of 'acting a lie', was not invented in those days, and there can hardly be imagined a figure more remote from my Father than Ibsen. Yet when I came, at a far later date, to read The Wild Duck, memories of the embarrassing household of my infancy helped me to realize Gregers Werle, with his determination to pull the veil of illusion away from every compromise that makes life bearable.

I was docile, I was plausible, I was anything but combative; if my Father could have persuaded himself to let me alone, if he could merely have been willing to leave my subterfuges and my explanations unanalysed, all would have been well. But he refused to see any difference in temperament between a lad of twenty and a sage of sixty. He had no vital sympathy for youth, which in itself had no charm for him. He had no compassion for the weaknesses of immaturity, and his one and only anxiety was to be at the end of his spiritual journey, safe with me in the house where there are many mansions. The incidents of human life upon the road to glory were less than nothing to him.

同类推荐
  • The Ecclesiazusae

    The Ecclesiazusae

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 杜环小传

    杜环小传

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 唯识三十论

    唯识三十论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 友人邀听歌有感

    友人邀听歌有感

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 海道经

    海道经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 愿为杀人剑

    愿为杀人剑

    她是一个叱咤风云的小丫头,心比男人还野,胆子比天还大;他是一个不得宠的丑陋皇子,虽有绝世武功,可孤寂阴森的皇陵他一守就是六年,终究磨钝了心,冷了血性。可他还是爱她啊,纵然知道她的心思全不在他这里她不需要他的爱,她说她不愿成为谁人匣中珍藏的玉璧,她宁愿成为君王手中杀人的利剑……~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~【女频一组C班签约作品】
  • 下一刻末日

    下一刻末日

    假如下一刻就是末日,你是苟且偷生还是轰轰烈烈抗争?
  • 时魂之百梦千夜

    时魂之百梦千夜

    每一个梦代表着一个故事,每一夜述说着不同的传说。也许梦之间毫无关系,但是他们之间有着一定的关联。时间和灵魂的尽头是什么?是一场梦吗?还是……
  • 快穿之万能女配扑倒男神攻略

    快穿之万能女配扑倒男神攻略

    “你没有的选择。”当初狐狸是这样对温梨说的,但也像他说的那样。温梨只得答应它的条件——穿梭到虚拟世界,攻略和逆袭,为了活下去。[玲珑骰子安红豆,入骨相思知不知.郎骑竹马来,绕床弄青梅.什么是人,欲望满身.]“叮——任务已被激活,欢迎来到绝望快穿系统。”
  • 商人三绝——世界上最神秘的经商智慧

    商人三绝——世界上最神秘的经商智慧

    英特尔总裁安迪.格罗夫说过:“商人是创办企业并为企业捕捉机会的人。“一语道出了商人的真谛,即商人要不断围绕创意做文章,在创意中寻找机会,在机会面前适时出击,靠脑子,而不是靠蛮力取得成功。对于商人的成长,训练技术不如训练智慧;锻炼蛮力不如锻炼思维;寻找财富不如寻找商机。本书没有艰深的理论,没有难懂的术语,只有若干通俗易懂的小品文。从结构上看,有故事,有点评,故事娓娓道来,点评恰到好处;从内容上看,既有赚钱的绝招,又有策划的妙法,平淡中体现创意,叙述中透露高招,从来没有先天的智者,正如从来没有人能随随便便成功一样。
  • 源来一凯始你就玺欢我

    源来一凯始你就玺欢我

    “喂!你看这个,好看吗?”王俊凯看都没看,“快点!”易伊嘟了嘟嘴,小声的说,“选礼物就应该慢慢的选嘛!”王俊凯看了她一眼,“五分钟。”王俊凯说完转身离开,天知道她有多讨厌眼前这个女孩。
  • 十二星座之当天际混乱

    十二星座之当天际混乱

    茫茫宇宙中,神秘的星座如此美丽!!白羊、天蝎、狮子、金牛、双鱼、双子、水瓶、处女、摩羯、天秤、射手、巨蟹十二星座都有着守护者,他们和睦相处。一场叛变、一场灾难,打乱了这和平幸福。。。。一个善良的人类女孩与守护者的故事。看他们,挽救灾难。。
  • 小魔女的完美王子

    小魔女的完美王子

    一个女孩把一个俗称完美王子的人迷住了,最后他们经过曲折终于在一起了~~~
  • 咒印神图

    咒印神图

    这是一个全新的世界,咒印是这个世界唯一的力量体现。咒印分为四大类:普通元素咒印,光明元素咒印,黑暗元素咒印,血继界限咒印。主角是一个拥有双血继界限加上光明咒印的天才型人物,当然,这并不代表他无敌,事实上,他是从失去咒印之后一步一步成长起来的。而这本书也并非是一味靠拳头解决问题的类型,更多的是展现主角从一个涉世未深的少年逐渐演变成一个靠实力与智谋征服一切困难的过程。PS:有充足存稿,稳定更新,东邪恳请各位兄弟收藏推荐支持!
  • 万神无缰

    万神无缰

    天下之大,我在何方?一个少年走下南山,踏入洪荒大地,一幅洪荒画卷就此展开。五行轮转,八极涌动,山海无垠,万灵林立!洪荒天阙我主沉浮!