登陆注册
5590500000030

第30章 THE PANSOPHIAN SOCIETY(1)

The Secretary of this association was getting somewhat tired of the office,and the office was getting somewhat tired of him.It occurred to the members of the Society that a little fresh blood infused into it might stir up the general vitality of the organization.The woman suffragists saw no reason why the place of Secretary need as a matter of course be filled by a person of the male sex.They agitated,they made domiciliary visits,they wrote notes to influential citizens,and finally announced as their candidate the young lady who had won and worn the school name of "The Terror,"who was elected.She was just the person for the place:

wide awake,with all her wits about her,full of every kind of knowledge,and,above all,strong on points of order and details of management,so that she could prompt the presiding officer,to do which is often the most essential duty of a Secretary.The President,the worthy rector,was good at plain sailing in the track of the common moralities and proprieties,but was liable to get muddled if anything came up requiring swift decision and off-hand speech.The Terror had schooled herself in the debating societies of the Institute,and would set up the President,when he was floored by an awkward question,as easily as if he were a ninepin which had been bowled over.

It has been already mentioned that the Pansophian Society received communications from time to time from writers outside of its own organization.Of late these had been becoming more frequent.Many of them were sent in anonymously,and as there were numerous visitors to the village,and two institutions not far removed from it,both full of ambitious and intelligent young persons,it was often impossible to trace the papers to their authors.The new Secretary was alive with curiosity,and as sagacious a little body as one might find if in want of a detective.She could make a pretty shrewd guess whether a paper was written by a young or old person,by one of her own sex or the other,by an experienced hand or a novice.

Among the anonymous papers she received was one which exercised her curiosity to an extraordinary degree.She felt a strong suspicion that "the Sachem,"as the boat-crews used to call him,"the Recluse,""the Night-Hawk,""the Sphinx,"as others named him,must be the author of it.It appeared to her the production of a young person of a reflective,poetical turn of mind.It was not a woman's way of writing;at least,so thought the Secretary.The writer had travelled much;had resided in Italy,among other places.But so had many of the summer visitors and residents of Arrowhead Village.The handwriting was not decisive;it had some points of resemblance with the pencilled orders for books which Maurice sent to the Library,but there were certain differences,intentional or accidental,which weakened this evidence.There was an undertone in the essay which was in keeping with the mode of life of the solitary stranger.It might be disappointment,melancholy,or only the dreamy sadness of a young person who sees the future he is to climb,not as a smooth ascent,but as overhanging him like a cliff,ready to crush him,with all his hopes and prospects.This interpretation may have been too imaginative,but here is the paper,and the reader can form his own opinion:

MY THREE COMPANIONS.

"I have been from my youth upwards a wanderer.I do not mean constantly flitting from one place to another,for my residence has often been fixed for considerable periods.From time to time I have put down in a notebook the impressions made upon me by the scenes through which I have passed.I have long hesitated whether to let any of my notes appear before the public.My fear has been that they were too subjective,to use the metaphysician's term,--that I have seen myself reflected in Nature,and not the true aspects of Nature as she was meant to be understood.One who should visit the Harz Mountains would see--might see,rather his own colossal image shape itself on the morning mist.But if in every mist that rises from the meadows,in every cloud that hangs upon the mountain,he always finds his own reflection,we cannot accept him as an interpreter of the landscape.

"There must be many persons present at the meetings of the Society to which this paper is offered who have had experiences like that of its author.They have visited the same localities,they have had many of the same thoughts and feelings.Many,I have no doubt.Not all,--no,not all.Others have sought the companionship of Nature;I have been driven to it.Much of my life has been passed in that communion.These pages record some of the intimacies I have formed with her under some of her various manifestations.

"I have lived on the shore of the great ocean,where its waves broke wildest and its voice rose loudest.

"I have passed whole seasons on the banks of mighty and famous rivers.

"I have dwelt on the margin of a tranquil lake,and floated through many a long,long summer day on its clear waters.

"I have learned the 'various language'of Nature,of which poetry has spoken,--at least,I have learned some words and phrases of it.Iwill translate some of these as I best may into common speech.

"The OCEAN says to the dweller on its shores:--You are neither welcome nor unwelcome.I do not trouble myself with the living tribes that come down to my waters.I have my own people,of an older race than yours,that grow to mightier dimensions than your mastodons and elephants;more numerous than all the swarms that fill the air or move over the thin crust of the earth.Who are you that build your palaces on my margin?I see your white faces as I saw the dark faces of the tribes that came before you,as I shall look upon the unknown family of mankind that will come after you.

同类推荐
  • 佛说八大灵塔名号经

    佛说八大灵塔名号经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 根本说一切有部戒经

    根本说一切有部戒经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 杂素菜单

    杂素菜单

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 道德真经注

    道德真经注

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说数经

    佛说数经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 人间夜色应如许

    人间夜色应如许

    ???俞茶是妖界少有的一只白虎妖,为那懵懂之情修仙炼道,历尽劫难如愿成仙,上天来寻她那小道士。终于寻着的小道士此时已经是个大仙官,他言:“我知晓你的情谊,可我也有钟意的人,不知该如何给你答复。”??她未说些什么,那情谊就被扼杀了,她低着头,不敢看他,嗫嚅道:“我知道了。”后着紧夹着尾巴逃离他的视线。???这八百年的情算了断了。???还有一段是五百年前劫,却不知怎的又找上门来……
  • 捉鬼新娘:首席欺上瘾

    捉鬼新娘:首席欺上瘾

    为了找到他,她策划了一起闹鬼事件,不想因此引出一片腥风血雨。她借故留了他身侧,捉鬼之余更是寸步不离。某女:我只是担心你的安危……某男唇角带着邪魅的笑:女人,快来暖床!
  • 出国英语对答如流

    出国英语对答如流

    内容涉及出国过程中的各种典型场景,从出入境、住宿、交通、用餐、购物、娱乐、出国求学、境外旅游、出国参展和商务出行等方面来展现出国过程中的各种真实情景,语言简洁明快,易学好记,实用性强。格式分为互动问答、高频精句、场景会话、金词放送和精彩片段等部分,结构清晰,设计活泼,突出场景,实用性强。
  • 斩魔风暴

    斩魔风暴

    千年前的一场大战,人族惨败,魔族大胜被魔族统治的神风大陆,一片生灵涂炭,人族成为魔族统治下的奴隶,被肆意欺凌,毫无地位可言!一位自大山中走出的少年,不忍人族如此遭难,誓要除魔卫道,还人类一个家园,开大陆太平盛世!当众神已经无能为力,便由我来解救世人!当魔雾弥漫整个大陆,便让我来除魔卫道!
  • 婚姻争夺战

    婚姻争夺战

    都说婚姻是爱情的坟墓,她的一段情确实迈进了坟墓。一次意外怀孕,让她奉子成婚,万般无奈嫁给一个凤凰男,从此家长里短。本着家庭和睦,能忍则忍,想要维持下去,却不想公公婆婆一度的得寸进尺,让她忍无可忍,终于开始婚姻反击战。这是一个女人为了自己的幸福勇于争斗的故事。
  • 爱似烈酒封喉

    爱似烈酒封喉

    沈言欢用尽一生爱过一个人。可他却转身将她送入地狱。他说,欢欢,杀人凶手不配得到爱。沈言欢咽下这苦涩的爱,任烈酒封喉。
  • 改变你一生的态度

    改变你一生的态度

    态度决定人生:积极的态度能为人带来有意义的人生,消极的态度则会使人生变得黯淡无光。
  • 易烊千玺鲸落

    易烊千玺鲸落

    鲸鱼是一种很灵性的动物,它知道自己快死时,会找一个安静的地方作为墓地,这也许是鲸鱼给大海最后的温柔吧
  • 花都之她们有系统

    花都之她们有系统

    叮!你激活了系统,成为叶枫的女仆,完成后您将会容颜永驻,百病不侵,永生不死。”
  • 谍殇之山河破碎

    谍殇之山河破碎

    民国28年全民抗日烽火连天,军统秘书刘泽之阴差阳错下,救了汪伪汉奸集团特务头目,于是,顺水推舟卧底汪伪政权。逐日计划、刺杀日本高官、营救战友、黄金大劫案,国军特工与日本间谍、汉奸之间展开了生死搏杀!