登陆注册
37420000000014

第14章

But he was a true artist,and English born as he was,he divined American character as few Americans have done.He was a man of eminent courage,and in the days when to be an agnostic was to be almost an outcast,he had the heart to say of the Mysteries,that he did not know.He outlived the condemnation that this brought,and I think that no man ever came near him without in some measure loving him.To me he was of a most winning personality,which his strong,gentle face expressed,and a cast in the eye which he could not bring to bear directly upon his vis-a-vis,endeared.I never met him without wishing more of his company,for he seldom failed to say something to whatever was most humane and most modern in me.Our last meeting was at Newburyport,whither he had long before removed from New York,and where in the serene atmosphere of the ancient Puritan town he found leisure and inspiration for his work.

He was not then engaged upon any considerable task,and he had aged and broken somewhat.But the old geniality,the old warmth glowed in him,and made a summer amidst the storm of snow that blinded the wintry air without.A new light had then lately come into my life,by which I saw all things that did not somehow tell for human brotherhood dwarfish and ugly,and he listened,as I imagined,to what I had to say with the tolerant sympathy of a man who has been a long time thinking those things,and views with a certain amusement the zeal of the fresh discoverer.

There was yet another historian in Boston,whose acquaintance I made later than either Parkman's or Parton's,and whose very recent death leaves me with the grief of a friend.No ones indeed,could meet John Codman Ropes without wishing to be his friend,or without finding a friend in him.He had his likes and his dislikes,but he could have had no enmities except for evil and meanness.I never knew a man of higher soul,of sweeter nature,and his whole life was a monument of character.

It cannot wound him now to speak of the cruel deformity which came upon him in his boyhood,and haunted all his after days with suffering.His gentle face showed the pain which is always the part of the hunchback,but nothing else in him confessed a sense of his affliction,and the resolute activity of his mind denied it in every way.He was,as is well known,a very able lawyer,in full practice,while he was ****** his studies of military history,and winning recognition for almost unique insight and thoroughness in that direction,though I believe that when he came to embody the results in those extraordinary volumes recording the battles of our civil war,he retired from the law in some measure.He knew these battles more accurately than the generals who fought them,and he was of a like proficiency in the European wars from the time of Napoleon down to our own time.I have heard a story,which I cannot vouch for,that when foreknowledge of his afliiction,at the outbreak of our civil war,forbade him to be a soldier,he became a student of soldiership,and wreaked in that sort the passion of his most gallant spirit.But whether this was true or not,it is certain that he pursued the study with a devotion which never blinded him to the atrocity of war.

Some wars he could excuse and even justify,but for any war that seemed wanton or aggressive,he had only abhorrence.

The last summer of a score that I had known him,we sat on the veranda of his cottage at York Harbor,and looked out over the moonlit sea,and he talked of the high and true things,with the inextinguishable zest for the inquiry which I always found in him,though he was then feeling the approaches of the malady which was so soon to end all groping in these shadows for him.He must have faced the fact with the same courage and the same trust with which he faced all facts.From the first I found him a deeply religious man,not only in the ecclesiastical sense,but in the more mystical meanings of the word,and he kept his faith as he kept his youth to the last.Every one who knew him,knows how young he was in heart,and how he liked to have those that were young in years about him.

He wished to have his house in Boston,as well as his cottage at York,full of young men and young girls,whose joy of life he made his own,and whose society he preferred to his contemporaries'.One could not blame him for that,or for seeking the sun,wherever he could,but it would be a false notion of him to suppose that his sympathies were solely or chiefly with the happy.In every sort,as I knew him,he was fine and good.The word is not worthy of him,after some of its uses and associations,but if it were unsmutched by these,and whitened to its primitive significance,I should say he was one of the most perfect gentlemen I ever knew.

同类推荐
  • 唐阙史

    唐阙史

    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。
  • 佛说菩萨本业经

    佛说菩萨本业经

    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。
  • 摄大乘论本

    摄大乘论本

    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。
  • 历代诗话索考

    历代诗话索考

    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。
  • 灵宝净明大法万道玉章秘诀

    灵宝净明大法万道玉章秘诀

    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
  • 送葬继承人

    送葬继承人

    川西开棺,晋西风水,湘西赶尸,山西送葬。冥王被封印,保存下来的五宝冥器:【镇魂棍】、【双龙椅】、【社稷图】、【聚灵旗】、【长生印】。送葬人,到底隐藏着什么秘密?
  • 别勉强

    别勉强

    在纷扰的娱乐圈里遇见同类,两颗年轻的心不由自主地靠近,他们以为纯粹的爱情可以战胜一切,却最终被无情的现实惨痛分离……多年之后他们顶峰相遇,已经各自成为歌王歌后,他们的故事将何去何从?平行时空的爱情真的存在吗?
  • 《神器附体》

    《神器附体》

    你的梦想就是我的梦想。你的敌人就是我的敌人。我的世界,就是你的世界!
  • 幽陌灵长风

    幽陌灵长风

    站在世界之巅的他,因一女子的逝去而疯狂的展开报复,最终,寡不敌众,生命垂危。而就在这个时刻,一个神秘女子救了他,并让‘他’与‘她’相逢。命运让他们再一次见面,是福?还是祸?
  • 仅为莹中萦

    仅为莹中萦

    夜晚,闪耀的光环退去,她在他温暖的怀抱中睡去,伴着他心脏安稳的跳动入眠;她拥着她柔软的身躯睡去,伴着她发间的暗香入眠。这一刻,他们不再是众人瞩目的焦点,也不再为世间繁华所累,只是一对心中只有彼此的兄妹,相拥相伴。“哥哥,我会不会梦到你”“不会”“嗯?”“因为你会跑进我的梦里”一吻,安然。绝对宠文!男强女强!他是伴她成长,宠她入骨的表哥;她是陪他永久,爱他入心的表妹。只拥有彼此的深爱。当深爱被世俗所阻,四目相对时,深情外,还有坚决。
  • 神级保镖

    神级保镖

    当一个神秘女子让他回到自己的家乡时,秦天发现,自己好像陷入了巨大的黑洞中……校花、总裁、警花似乎都跟他扯上了关系,只是,秦天不知道的是,在暗处,一直有双眼睛在盯着他。
  • 末法之千变万化

    末法之千变万化

    本名陈昊,曾用名王帅夫,血滴堂官方认证专业刺客。喜欢的游戏是,喜欢吃的东西是羊杂汤和桶面。(背景设定比较任性,末法时代是因为灵力无法吸收,但是科技树照点,打架靠异能)
  • 知否知否应是红橙黄绿青蓝紫

    知否知否应是红橙黄绿青蓝紫

    我的人生是彩色的,红橙黄绿青蓝紫,因为有你
  • 大商贝玖

    大商贝玖

    商人从古到今都有,有的朝代重农抑商,有的朝代重伤,在历史的洪流中,商人也是一个必不可少的角色
  • 孤夜自处

    孤夜自处

    “你即是梁国派来的间谍又为何从不向朕示好,反而把朕往门外推。”齐晟看着摆弄瓷器的元珊说,元珊抬起头看着他说:“因为我的目标从来都不是走近你,而是走进你的心里。”元珊靠近他看着他。?