登陆注册
26297000000119

第119章 CHAPTER II(11)

"April 26th, 1848.

"My dear Sir,--I have now read 'Rose, Blanche, and Violet,' and Iwill tell you, as well as I can, what I think of it. Whether it is an improvement on 'Ranthorpe' I do not know, for I liked 'Ranthorpe' much; but, at any rate, it contains more of a good thing. I find in it the same power, but more fully developed.

"The author's character is seen in every page, which makes the book interesting--far more interesting than any story could do;but it is what the writer himself says that attracts far more than what he puts into the mouths of his characters. G. H. Lewes is, to my perception, decidedly the most original character in the book. . . . The didactic passages seem to me the best--far the best--in the work; very acute, very profound, are some of the views there given, and very clearly they are offered to the reader. He is a just thinker; he is a sagacious observer; there is wisdom in his theory, and, I doubt not, energy in his practice. But why, then, are you often provoked with him while you read? How does he manage, while teaching, to make his hearer feel as if his business was, not quietly to receive the doctrines propounded, but to combat them? You acknowledge that he offers you gems of pure truth; why do you keep perpetually scrutinising them for flaws?

"Mr. Lewes, I divine, with all his talents and honesty, must have some faults of manner; there must be a touch too much of dogmatism; a dash extra of confidence in him, sometimes. This you think while you are reading the book; but when you have closed it and laid it down, and sat a few minutes collecting your thoughts, and settling your impressions, you find the idea or feeling predominant in your mind to be pleasure at the fuller acquaintance you have made with a fine mind and a true heart, with high abilities and manly principles. I hope he will not be long ere he publishes another book. His emotional scenes are somewhat too uniformly vehement: would not a more subdued style of treatment often have produced a more masterly effect? Now and then Mr. Lewes takes a French pen into his hand, wherein he differs from Mr. Thackeray, who always uses an English quill.

However, the French pen does not far mislead Mr. Lewes; he wields it with British muscles. All honour to him for the excellent general tendency of his book!

"He gives no charming picture of London literary society, and especially the female part of it; but all coteries, whether they be literary, scientific, political, or religious, must, it seems to me, have a tendency to change truth into affectation. When people belong to a clique, they must, I suppose, in some measure, write, talk, think, and live for that clique; a harassing and narrowing necessity. I trust, the press and the public show themselves disposed to give the book the reception it merits, and that is a very cordial one, far beyond anything due to a Bulwer or D'Israeli production."Let us return from Currer Bell to Charlotte Bronte. The winter in Haworth had been a sickly season. Influenza had prevailed amongst the villagers, and where there was a real need for the presence of the clergyman's daughters, they were never found wanting, although they were shy of bestowing mere social visits on the parishioners. They had themselves suffered from the epidemic;Anne severely, as in her case it had been attended with cough and fever enough to make her elder sisters very anxious about her.

There is no doubt that the proximity of the crowded church-yard rendered the Parsonage unhealthy, and occasioned much illness to its inmates. Mr. Bronte represented the unsanitary state at Haworth pretty forcibly to the Board of Health; and, after the requisite visits from their officers, obtained a recommendation that all future interments in the churchyard should be forbidden, a new graveyard opened on the hill-side, and means set on foot for obtaining a water-supply to each house, instead of the weary, hard-worked housewives having to carry every bucketful, from a distance of several hundred yards, up a steep street. But he was baffled by the rate-payers; as, in many a similar instance, quantity carried it against quality, numbers against intelligence. And thus we find that illness often assumed a low typhoid form in Haworth, and fevers of various kinds visited the place with sad frequency.

In February, 1848, Louis Philippe was dethroned. The quick succession of events at that time called forth the following expression of Miss Bronte's thoughts on the subject, in a letter addressed to Miss Wooler, and dated March 31st.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 穿越囧事录

    穿越囧事录

    我叫周重吾,外号毛黄。我遭遇了穿越,而且过来以后混得还不错,要啥有啥,修炼简单,交友方便,一路顺风顺水,简直是天堂难度的异界冒险,但——我变成狗了。他叫叶铭,外号叶大侠。他也遭遇了穿越,过来以后遇到了一条狗……
  • 一线万金——电话销售的7阶秘诀

    一线万金——电话销售的7阶秘诀

    本丛书由影响力训练集团组织十几位专家、几十位学者、上百位培训界精英历经三年时间精心创作,内容注重实战,以解决企业管理实际问题为导向;论述深入浅出,通俗易懂;工具多、方法多、案例多,且经过多轮培训课程使用并经过多次修订,受到各层次管理者的欢迎和好评。本书紧紧围绕电话销售人员的职位要求,按照电话销售工作的七个流程:前期准备、“说”好开场白、识别客户需求、成功进行产品推介、适时跟进、顺利成交和做好售后服务,详细阐述了在电话销售过程中电话销售人员必须掌握的销售技巧。
  • 华严起宗真禅师语录

    华严起宗真禅师语录

    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。
  • 天主之戒

    天主之戒

    从小就是孤儿的叶枫,靠着自己的努力读完了大学,眼看着要找工作,不过朋友被情敌杀死的仇不能不报!一支秘密的小队驻扎在紫金山脉,偶然发现他们的叶枫想要他们教自己变强的方法。毕业的那一天,紫金山秘密小队竟然被敌国特工全部杀死,杀死了被小队队长诅咒的敌人,得到了一个宝盒。从此一枚戒指,一个绝世美人,生死不弃,与叶枫命运相连。同时地球人族也已经风雨飘摇,同样被宇宙意志视为眼中钉,肉中刺的他们,必须拧成一条绳,共同对抗强大的敌人,到底是宇宙意志代表的异族联盟一方取得胜利,灭掉宇宙中所有的人族,还是叶枫代表的人族势力获胜,取代宇宙意志的统治,敬请收看《天主之戒》。
  • The Diary of an Old Soul

    The Diary of an Old Soul

    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。
  • 着装小窍门

    着装小窍门

    本书从不同的行业出发为大家介绍不一样的职业之间一些不同的着装技巧。
  • 恃宠而骄:腹黑苏少惹不起

    恃宠而骄:腹黑苏少惹不起

    顾默没有想到,她来这世间二十一年,会有一天为了钱,把自己送上一个陌生男人的床。“做我的女人,给你想要的一切!”男人醉醺醺的,将她抵在医院漆黑的楼道内。“苏少,我们银货两讫,希望以后不要再有瓜葛。”“银货两讫?”男人邪魅的挑挑眉,“你真以为你值一百万?”
  • 紫阳真人悟真篇注疏

    紫阳真人悟真篇注疏

    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。
  • 瓦罗兰异闻录

    瓦罗兰异闻录

    关于瓦罗兰英雄们的故事,很大一部分是按照官方的背景故事来改编的,写作风格类似于比尔吉沃特:焰之浪潮故事的风格。希望读者们能够喜欢这样的故事。
  • 景在花未央

    景在花未央

    本是娇弱的女子,注定要用一生守护他人;本是世家的公子,却为所爱之人不顾世俗;当你觉得生活不易时,可曾预料日后的庆幸?当你觉得生活容易时,可曾想到有人在守护?主人、随从、医者、贵女、世子、平民……众生芸芸,谁人躲得过命运逃得了情。桃花雨下,时光流转。尘埃落定后,谁欢喜了谁,谁又辜负了谁?