登陆注册
37887100000015

第15章 VIII(2)

A good many, years before Longfellow's death he began to be sleepless, and he suffered greatly. He said to me once that he felt as if he were going about with his heart in a kind of mist. The whole night through he would not be aware of having slept. " But," he would add, with his heavenly patience, "I always get a good deal of rest from lying down so long." I cannot say whether these conditions persisted, or how much his insomnia had to do with his breaking health; three or four years before the end came, we left Cambridge for a house farther in the country, and I saw him less frequently than before. He did not allow our meetings to cease; he asked me to dinner from time to time, as if to keep them up, but it could not be with the old frequency. Once he made a point of coming to see us in our cottage on the hill west of Cambridge, but it was with an effort not visible in the days when he could end one of his brief walks at our house on Concord Avenue; he never came but he left our house more luminous for his having been there. Once he came to supper there to meet Garfield (an old family friend of mine in Ohio), and though he was suffering from a heavy cold, he would not scant us in his stay. I had some very bad sherry which he drank with the serenity of a martyr, and I shudder to this day to think what his kindness must have cost him. He told his story of the clothes-line ghost, and Garfield matched it with the story of an umbrella ghost who sheltered a friend of his through a midnight storm, but was not cheerful company to his beneficiary, who passed his hand through him at one point in the effort to take his arm.

After the end of four years I came to Cambridge to be treated for a long sickness, which had nearly been my last, and when I could get about I returned the visit Longfellow had not failed to pay me. But I did not find him, and I never saw him again in life. I went into Boston to finish the winter of 1881-2, and from time to time I heard that the poet was failing in health. As soon as I felt able to bear the horse-car journey I went out to Cambridge to see him. I had knocked once at his door, the friendly door that had so often opened to his welcome, and stood with the knocker in my hand when the door was suddenly set ajar, and a maid showed her face wet with tears. "How is Mr. Longfellow?"

I palpitated, and with a burst of grief she answered, "Oh, the poor gentleman has just departed!" I turned away as if from a helpless intrusion at a death-bed.

At the services held in the house before the obsequies at the cemetery, I saw the poet for the last time, where "Dead he lay among his books," in the library behind his study. Death seldom fails to bring serenity to all, and I will not pretend that there was a peculiar peacefulness in Longfellow's noble mask, as I saw it then. It was calm and benign as it had been in life; he could not have worn a gentler aspect in going out of the world than he had always worn in it; he had not to wait for death to dignify it with "the peace of God." All who were left of his old Cambridge were present, and among those who had come farther was Emerson.

He went up to the bier, and with his arms crossed on his breast, and his elbows held in either hand, stood with his head pathetically fallen forward, looking down at the dead face. Those who knew how his memory was a mere blank, with faint gleams of recognition capriciously coming and going in it, must have felt that he was struggling ,to remember who it was lay there before him; and for me the electly ****** words confessing his failure will always be pathetic with his remembered aspect: "The gentleman we have just been burying," he said, to the friend who had come with him, "was a sweet and beautiful soul; but I forget his name."

I had the privilege and honor of looking over the unprinted poems Longfellow left behind him, and of helping to decide which of them should be published.

There were not many of them, and some of these few were quite fragmentary. I gave my voice for the publication of all that had any sort of completeness, for in every one there was a touch of his exquisite art, the grace of his most lovely spirit. We have so far had two men only who felt the claim of their gift to the very best that the most patient skill could give its utterance: one was Hawthorne and the other was Longfellow. I shall not undertake to say which was the greater artist of these two; but I am sure that every one who has studied it must feel with me that the art of Longfellow held out to the end with no touch of decay in it, and that it equalled the art of any other poet of his time. It knew when to give itself, and more and more it knew when to withhold itself.

What Longfellow's place in literature will be, I shall not offer to say;that is Time's affair, not mine; but I am sure that with Tennyson and Browning he fully shared in the expression of an age which more completely than any former age got itself said by its poets.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 他和她,心与心之间的距离

    他和她,心与心之间的距离

    13岁那年,晓月和志明是形影不离的好朋友,很快,他们互相因为各自的问题而慢慢的越离越远,仿佛有一条他们无法靠近的鸿沟阻碍着他与她。时光荏苒,两人竟没有再次相见,尽管想在彼此的人海之中寻觅着他/她的身影,但只是徒劳。很快,长大后的两人有了各自的生活,只是偶尔还会回想到13岁的时候的事情,才发觉那份感情直到至今,在心中仍然处于最为珍贵的地方,无可替代。(本书由4个故事组成。)
  • 最后一棵树

    最后一棵树

    《最后一棵树》收集了作家相裕亭发表在《故事会》《山海经》《新故事》《今古传奇》《古今故事报》等国内权威故事报刊上的40余篇精品力作。本书所选作品,题材广泛,皆贴近现实,贴近生活,形式活泼,内容丰富,情节生动,读来引人入胜,令读者在轻松愉快地阅读中,分辨是非,感悟人生,享受快乐。
  • EXO之用命去爱你

    EXO之用命去爱你

    原本是青梅竹马的我们,你却因为她打我,我会加倍还给她的。一年后,我回来了,你还好吗。我和泰妍成了好朋友。爱情开始了吗?好景不长。又来了一个尚琳。小熙‘记住藏好他;别惹我不开心,否则别怪我不客气’。A市。我遇到了你朴氏大少爷。接下来会发生什么呢?尽请期待吧!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 社团往事

    社团往事

    社团是一种特殊的组织,他们拥有不在少数的成员,掌控着自己的势力,经营着自己的生意,在这些生意当中有合法的,也有不合法的,他们是一群有组织的犯罪团伙。社团是社会的一部分,他们与警察经常上演着猫和老鼠的游戏,但也像朋友一样共同维持着某个地方的秩序,在这个圈子里,生存是艰难的,因为利益才是每个人的最终目标,道义与背叛,朋友与敌人,什么才是应该遵守的原则,这个问题拷问着每个人的心灵。
  • 三国狙击手

    三国狙击手

    笑看天下烽烟起,王者乱世主沉浮,坐拥雄兵百万甲,几番生死渡苍茫。生灵涂炭沙染血,天下大统止干戈,是非成败皆虚空,功过自有后人评。穿越了,我来到了东汉末年,乱世出英雄的年代,我又该做些什么?泡小乔戏貂蝉?俗!降吕布收赵云?更俗!结曹操拜刘备?俗不可耐!我有我的美人,我有我的猛将,我有我的雄才大略!且看一个名不见经传的小人物如何带领一群同样名不见经传的小人物,一同狙击魏蜀吴的三国格局!A签作品,不会太监的,列位看官放心收藏。
  • 偷吻七月风

    偷吻七月风

    某女忽然下意识地推开他,说道:“唉,别这样,这是在大街上啊!”某男笑了笑,一个公主抱将她抱起,她不安分地乱动,说道:“快放我下来。”“嘘,乖。”说着,某男将她的头强行摁在自己的怀里,走向……
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 终极刺客

    终极刺客

    有光的地方就有阴影,刺客,黑暗的执行者,游离于生活之外,却又隐藏于生活之中,他们执一柄短刺,刻下了只属于自己的传世铭文
  • 洪荒之创世战记

    洪荒之创世战记

    繁荣昌盛的洪荒世界最终还是面临了毁灭,最后的幸存者却意外的穿梭了时空,回到了巫妖大战前夕……在这时的人族才刚刚诞生不久,还没有领悟到修行的法门,只能作为食物,苟延残喘的活在世间。携带者无数道统传承的希望,能给这个种族,这个世界带来什么?最终走向毁灭,还是无尽的永恒?