登陆注册
18325000000021

第21章 CHAPTER V--SOME SCHOLARS OF THE RESTORATION(4)

It is not easy to gather from this confession whether Prideaux had or had not read the books he "coated." It is certain that Dean Aldrich (and here again we recognise the eternal criticism of modern Oxford) held a poor opinion of Humphrey Prideaux. Aldrich said Prideaux was "incorrect," "muddy-headed," "he would do little or nothing besides heaping up notes"; "as for MSS. he would not trouble himself about any, but rest wholly upon what had been done to his hands by former editors." This habit of carping, this trick of collecting notes, this inability to put a work through, this dawdling erudition, this horror of manuscripts, every Oxford man knows them, and feels those temptations which seem to be in the air. Oxford is a discouraging place. College drudgery absorbs the hours of students in proportion to their conscientiousness. They have only the waste odds-and-ends of time for their own labours. They live in an atmosphere of criticism. They collect notes, they wait, they dream; their youth goes by, and the night comes when no man can work. The more praise to the tutors and lecturers who decipher the records of Assyria, or patiently collate the manuscripts of the Iliad, who not only teach what is already known, but add to the stock of knowledge, and advance the boundaries of scholarship and science.

One lesson may be learned from Prideaux's cynical letters, which is still worth the attention of every young Oxford student who is conscious of ambition, of power, and of real interest in letters. He can best serve his University by coming out of her, by declining college work, and by devoting himself to original study in some less exhausted air, in some less critical society.

Among the aversions of Humphrey Prideaux were the "gentlemen of All Souls." They certainly showed extraordinary impudence when they secretly employed the University Press to print off copies of Marc Antonio's engravings after Giulio Romano's drawings. It chanced that Fell visited the press rather late one evening, and found "his press working at such an imployment. The prints and plates he hath seased, and threatened the owners of them with expulsion." "All Souls," adds Prideaux, "is a scandalous place." Yet All Souls was the college of young Mr. Guise, an Arabic scholar, "the greatest miracle in the knowledge of that I ever heard of." Guise died of smallpox while still very young.

Thus Prideaux prattles on, about Admiral Van Tromp, "a drunken greazy Dutchman," whom Speed, of St. John's, conquered in boozing; of the disputes about races in Port Meadow; of the breaking into the Mermaid Tavern. "We Christ Church men bear the blame of it, our ticks, as the noise of the town will have it, amounting to 1,500 pounds." Thus Christ Church had little cause to throw the first stone at Balliol.

Prideaux shows little interest in letters, little in the press, though he lived in palmy days of printing, in the time of the Elzevirs; none at all in the educational work of the place. He sneers at the Puritans, and at the controversy on "The Foundations of Hell Torments shaken and removed." He admits that Locke "is a man of very good converse, but is chiefly concerned to spy out the movements of the philosopher, suspected of sedition, and to report them to Ellis in town. About the new buildings, as of the beautiful western gateway, where Great Tom is hung, the work of Wren, Prideaux says little; St. Mary's was suffering restoration, and "the old men," including Wood, we may believe, "exceedingly exclaim against it."

That is the way of Oxford, a college is constantly rebuilding amid the protests of the rest of the University. There is no question more common, or less agreeable than this, "What are you doing to your tower?" or "What are you doing to your hall, library, or chapel?" No one ever knows; but we are always doing something, and working men for ever sit, and drink beer, on the venerable roofs.

Long intercourse with Prideaux's letters, and mournful memories of Oxford new buildings, tempt a writer to imitate Prideaux's spirit.

Let us shut up his book, where he leaves Oxford, in 1686, to become rector of Saham-Toney, in Norfolk, and marry a wife, though, says he, "I little thought I should ever come to this."

同类推荐
  • 二酉委谭摘录

    二酉委谭摘录

    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。
  • 丹溪心法

    丹溪心法

    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。
  • 梅溪词

    梅溪词

    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。
  • 松峰说疫

    松峰说疫

    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。
  • 明伦汇编宫闱典宫女部

    明伦汇编宫闱典宫女部

    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
  • 魂嗜

    魂嗜

    灵魂,生命之根本。生命如晨曦,出而做落而息。循环往复,周而复始。
  • 复仇之破碎的爱已凋谢

    复仇之破碎的爱已凋谢

    小诗翎造人陷害,父亲背叛,母亲被杀,从小除了琳姨世界上上再也没有人懂她了......
  • 蝴蝶再续旧时光

    蝴蝶再续旧时光

    意林小小姐蝴蝶飞过旧时光又名同桌的距离有多远,第二部十年花开结局真的不喜欢,所以自己自己想要第二部,希望大家支持。
  • 淑女的诺言(欧罗巴玫瑰之二)

    淑女的诺言(欧罗巴玫瑰之二)

    [花雨授权]她曾经以为自己永远不会有求婚者,就当她已经不想嫁人时,“魔鬼伯爵”威尔向她求婚了!而她却发现这位伯爵反复无常和难以捉摸。通过接触,历经磨难,就在他们觉得幸福正走向他们时,一双黑手却伸向了他们……
  • 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!
  • 总有奸臣想谋反

    总有奸臣想谋反

    淡淡的檀木香充斥在身旁,镂空的雕花窗中上面斑斑点点的细碎阳光,侧过身,便见一佳人立于床前。白衣洁净,如青树玉枝琼立。衣袖、襟前、袍角却用金色镶了边,衬出一股高贵之气;衣摆处精细绣了绽放的红梅,繁复层叠,颇有清冷高贵之意…以为这简介?上述内容与原文不符,舍去。[以下本文简介]新闻报道:著名政治家莫谨,因失足滑下下水道而被淹死。莫谨曰:我可能是这年头最重口味的穿越者了…自从穿越莫谨嫉妒心飙升。别人家就斗个小白莲,小绿茶就可以迎娶白富帅走上人生巅峰。而自家这情况,美男个个对我避之如虎,避就避吧,为毛还搞刺杀?假正经逗比女主ⅤS(XXXXXX)男主
  • 一壶漂泊,我的深爱不回头

    一壶漂泊,我的深爱不回头

    温艾爱了安修廷十五年,从八岁起。安修廷恨了温艾十五年,从十岁起。十五年的时光太短,短到温艾还没细品,幸福就已变成噩梦。家破人亡之际,她被查出怀有身孕。孩子的爸爸,是安修廷。十五年的时光太长,长到安修廷谋划好了一切,将爱情变成了复仇的工具。他要温家血债血偿的时候,却被告知她怀孕了。孩子的妈妈,是他的仇人。
  • 流年(中卷)

    流年(中卷)

    长篇小说《流年》是朱西京历时10年的作品,由作家出版社于2008年正式出版,小说分上中下三部,共120余万字,内容涉及城市、农村及社会各个阶层,多种人物的形象和心态,人物个性鲜明、市景逼真,生动再现了60年代至今40多年来中国社会的巨大变革和人们的心灵动荡,呈现了一种史诗般的文学追求。著名作家陈忠实在看了《流年》后表示,该作品有生活的深度、广度、宽度和硬度,是生活的原汁原味,是一部具有非凡史诗气质的作品。
  • 天价私宠求交往

    天价私宠求交往

    容氏集团现任总裁,覆手为雨的金融界奇才容言换女人比换衣服还快!却只对路遥宠爱有加!他娇惯她,却从不染指她!可她依旧自信满满:“容言,我要和你在这场追求与被追求的爱情里,八仙过海,各显神通!直到你爱上我!”可到最后她才发现,自己是个天大的笑话!决裂那个雨夜,她嚎啕大哭:“如果我不姓路,对你而言是不是什么都不是?”“你的心里一直有她,只有她!你为什么不告诉我!”“伤害她很难,伤害我就很容易是不是?”“从今天起,我会从你的世界,滚的远远的!”一场意外,将她推向生死边缘!直到后来,他找到她住过的医院,却再也找不到她的身影。情节虚构,请勿模仿。
  • 每天多暖你一点

    每天多暖你一点

    前世,在温晨曦的眼里,江渊为人冷漠,待人疏离。可在温晨曦最无助的时候拼了命地保护她,甚至为她入了狱。他拒见了她十年,她等了他十年。可他出狱时,她却出了意外。温晨曦认为以她对他的认识看来不过是见义勇为。可早已化为魂魄的她竟然看见江渊因她的死崩溃,甚至为了陪她而自杀。这一世,温晨曦决定重新认识江渊,不经意发现那个少年冷漠下的伤痛以及对自己那深藏不欲人知的爱。重来一世,温晨曦只想用余生一点点温暖江渊,一点点治愈他的伤。对于江渊来说,他的世界在遇见温晨曦前黑白一片,遇见她后,色彩才一点点渗入他的世界。她是他唯一的信仰,拼了命也要保护的人儿。重生文,男女主双洁,温暖小可爱与冷漠大忠犬互相治愈的故事。