登陆注册
26930800000028

第28章 THE WIFE DEAD.(2)

How,thought I,will he be able to bear the hour of her death,that could not,when I was lately with him,speak of a sickness,which was then past,without sorrow!We were now got pretty far into Westminster,and arrived at my friend's house.At the door of it Imet Favonius,not without a secret satisfaction to find he had been there.I had formerly conversed with him at his house;and as he abounds with that sort of virtue and knowledge which makes religion beautiful,and never leads the conversation into the violence and rage of party disputes,I listened to him with great pleasure.Our discourse chanced to be upon the subject of death,which he treated with such a strength of reason,and greatness of soul,that,instead of being terrible,it appeared to a mind rightly cultivated,altogether to be contemned,or rather to be desired.As I met him at the door,I saw in his face a certain glowing of grief and humanity,heightened with an air of fortitude and resolution,which,as I afterwards found,had such an irresistible force,as to suspend the pains of the dying,and the lamentation of the nearest friends who attended her.I went up directly to the room where she lay,and was met at the entrance by my friend,who,notwithstanding his thoughts had been composed a little before,at the sight of me turned away his face and wept.The little family of children renewed the expressions of their sorrow according to their several ages and degrees of understanding.The eldest daughter was in tears,busied in attendance upon her mother;others were kneeling about the bedside:and what troubled me most,was,to see a little boy,who was too young to know the reason,weeping only because his sisters did.The only one in the room who seemed resigned and comforted was the dying person.At my approach to the bedside,she told me,with a low broken voice,"This is kindly done--take care of your friend--do not go from him!"She had before taken leave of her husband and children,in a manner proper for so solemn a parting,and with a gracefulness peculiar to a woman of her character.My heart was torn to pieces,to see the husband on one side suppressing and keeping down the swellings of his grief,for fear of disturbing her in her last moments;and the wife even at that time concealing the pains she endured,for fear of increasing his affliction.She kept her eyes upon him for some moments after she grew speechless,and soon after closed them for ever.In the moment of her departure,my friend,who had thus far commanded himself,gave a deep groan,and fell into a swoon by her bedside.The distraction of the children,who thought they saw both their parents expiring together,and now lying dead before them,would have melted the hardest heart;but they soon perceived their father recover,whom Ihelped to remove into another room,with a resolution to accompany him till the first pangs of his affliction were abated.I knew consolation would now be impertinent;and,therefore,contented myself to sit by him,and condole with him in silence.For I shall here use the method of an ancient author,who in one of his epistles,relating the virtues and death of Macrinus's wife,expresses himself thus:"I shall suspend my advice to this best of friends,till he is made capable of receiving it by those three great remedies (necessitas ipsa,dies longa,et satietas doloris),the necessity of submission,length of time,and satiety of grief."In the meantime,I cannot but consider,with much commiseration,the melancholy state of one who has had such a part of himself torn from him,and which he misses in every circumstance of life.His condition is like that of one who has lately lost his right arm,and is every moment offering to help himself with it.He does not appear to himself the same person in his house,at his table,in company,or in retirement;and loses the relish of all the pleasures and diversions that were before entertaining to him by her participation of them.This additional satisfaction,from the taste of pleasures in the society of one we love,is admirably described in Milton,who represents Eve,though in Paradise itself,no further pleased with the beautiful objects around her,than as she sees them in company with Adam,in that passage so inexpressibly charming:

"With thee conversing,I forget all time;

All seasons,and their change;all please alike.

Sweet is the breath of morn,her rising sweet With charm of earliest birds;pleasant the sun,When first on this delightful land he spreads His orient beams,on herb,tree,fruit,and flower,Glistering with dew;fragrant the fertile earth After short showers;and sweet the coming on Of grateful evening mild;the silent night,With this her solemn bird,and this fair moon,And these the gems of Heaven,her starry train.

But neither breath of morn when she ascends With charm of earliest birds;nor rising sun On this delightful land;nor herb,fruit,flower,Glistering with dew;nor fragrance after showers;Nor grateful evening mild;nor silent night,With this her solemn bird,nor walk by moon,Or glittering star-light,without thee is sweet."The variety of images in this passage is infinitely pleasing;and the recapitulation of each particular image,with a little varying of the expression,makes one of the finest turns of words that Ihave ever seen:which I rather mention because Mr.Dryden has said,in his preface to Juvenal,that he could meet with no turn of words in Milton.

It may further be observed,that though the sweetness of these verses has something in it of a pastoral,yet it excels the ordinary kind,as much as the scene of it is above an ordinary field or meadow.I might here,as I am accidentally led into this subject,show several passages in Milton that have as excellent turns of this nature as any of our English poets whatsoever;but shall only mention that which follows,in which he describes the fallen angels engaged in the intricate disputes of predestination,free-will,and fore-knowledge;and,to humour the perplexity,makes a kind of labyrinth in the very words that describe it.

"Others apart sat on a hill retired,In thoughts more elevate,and reasoned high Of providence,fore-knowledge,will,and fate,Fixed fate,free-will,fore-knowledge absolute,And found no end,in wandering mazes lost."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 蛇王儿子异世娘

    蛇王儿子异世娘

    好吧!她苏落忧也穿越了,还是穿在一个不受宠的小妾身上,更更重要的是,她刚穿越就在拼死拼活的生孩子。九死一生,王爷不但不来看她,还想抢走她的孩子。于是夺子之争开始了。王爷的怀疑迫使她用假死离开王府。为了她,他们可以抛弃所有,只为陪伴左右,是谁舍身救她心爱之人,只为她不会难过,又是谁放弃皇权,永远相伴左右,是他还是他?如此优秀的人们,她该如何面对他们的真心,接受或者拒绝?前世今生的爱恋,她已不是原来善良天真的那个她,她的命运该如何掌握,天下之大,谁与争锋。
  • 茅山术之人间劫

    茅山术之人间劫

    以下人群禁止阅读——1.18岁以下未成年;2.有任何程度抑郁症、忧郁症患者;3.以各类电影和现实中的杀人狂为偶像以及以成为杀手为梦想者;4.抱着理想主义人生观者;5.有暴力倾向者。故事纯属虚构,如有雷同,那就是真事儿...
  • 时光我们都老了

    时光我们都老了

    天哪!!!!这个世界上真的有系统。积分太少是死,完不成任务是死,这还让人怎么活???算了,既来之,则安之。男主,女主,男配,你们…准备好了吗?
  • 萌妻拒嫁:老公晚安

    萌妻拒嫁:老公晚安

    对只想睡她却不喜欢她的男人,为了保住最后这点尊严,她决定滚离他的世界。大街上碰到,她昂头看云。商场里碰到,她低头看物。宴会上碰到,她色眯眯的只顾盯着别家美男笑。终有一天,某男怒了,“谭晓曦,你到底想怎样?”是她想怎样,还是他想怎样。城市这么大,他们又是生活在两个阶层的人,她就不信日理万机的他会这闲。
  • 晶莹剔透心

    晶莹剔透心

    每一个闪烁的梦想,都有一颗晶莹透亮的心。
  • 阴阳封魔录

    阴阳封魔录

    李尚阳到底是什么身份?那两把剑为何只有他能操控?喜欢的话加群474037776
  • 历代赋评注·魏晋卷

    历代赋评注·魏晋卷

    《历代赋评注》全书七卷,选录从先秦至近代三百多位作家的赋近六百篇加以注释和品评。其中大部分作品以前没有人注过。主编赵逵夫教授为著名辞赋研究专家,中国辞赋学会顾问。各卷主编和撰稿人也都是在古代文学研究方面有较高修养的学者,基本上都是高职和博士。本书是目前篇幅最大的一部历代赋注评本。书中对入选作家的生平和作品的背景均作了介绍。
  • 总裁追妻:宠爱丑小鸭

    总裁追妻:宠爱丑小鸭

    【宠文】【婚恋文】欧阳谨此刻只想亲手掐死那个小笨蛋,竟然那么潇洒的留下一份离婚协议书就给他玩失踪!他就应该早点让她怀孕,省得她总爱胡思乱想,都怪自己想多享受几年二人世界。叶秋瑶如果当年不那么笨,就不会任由自己做灰姑娘的梦,就不会走进他建造的城堡;如果她不那么自卑,就不会悄悄留下离婚协议,独自一个人躲到爱丁堡。欧阳谨:过来,告诉我,这份协议是什么?叶秋瑶:我要离婚。欧阳谨:除非我死,否则你想都别想。叶秋瑶:你觉得这个世上会有离不了的婚吗?欧阳谨:你尽管试试看。
  • 恶魔的最后一滴眼泪

    恶魔的最后一滴眼泪

    十年前,她来到他的家,他费尽心思整她。而十年后,他却从监狱里出来,而只有她一个人在门口等他······
  • 影子陪我走到世界的尽头

    影子陪我走到世界的尽头

    影子的相伴,内心的挣扎,一次次的伤害,永远的陪伴