登陆注册
36840600000034

第34章 A NON-LITERARY EPISODE

I suppose I might almost class my devotion to English reviews among my literary passions, but it was of very short lease, not beyond a year or two at the most. In the midst of it I made my first and only essay aside from the lines of literature, or rather wholly apart from it. After some talk with my father it was decided, mainly by myself, I suspect, that I should leave the printing-office and study law; and it was arranged with the United States Senator who lived in our village, and who was at home from Washington for the summer, that I was to come into his office. The Senator was by no means to undertake my instruction himself; his nephew, who had just begun to read law, was to be my fellow-student, and we were to keep each other up to the work, and to recite to each other, until we thought we had enough law to go before a board of attorneys and test our fitness for admission to the bar.

This was the custom in that day and place, as I suppose it is still in most parts of the country. We were to be fitted for practice in the courts, not only by our reading, but by a season of pettifogging before justices of the peace, which I looked forward to with no small shrinking of my shy spirit; but what really troubled me most, and was always the grain of sand between my teeth, was Blackstone's confession of his own original preference for literature, and his perception that the law was "a jealous mistress," who would suffer no rival in his affections.

I agreed with him that I could not go through life with a divided interest; I must give up literature or I must give up law. I not only consented to this logically, but I realized it in my attempt to carry on the reading I had loved, and to keep at the efforts I was always ****** to write something in verse or prose, at night, after studying law all day. The strain was great enough when I had merely the work in the printing-office; but now I came home from my Blackstone mentally fagged, and I could not take up the authors whom at the bottom of my heart I loved so much better. I tried it a month, but almost from the fatal day when I found that confession of Blackstone's, my whole being turned from the "jealous mistress" to the high minded muses: I had not only to go back to literature, but I had also to go back to the printing-office.

I did not regret it, but I had made my change of front in the public eye, and I felt that it put me at a certain disadvantage with my fellow-

citizens; as for the Senator, whose office I had forsaken, I met him now and then in the street, without trying to detain him, and once when he came to the printing-office for his paper we encountered at a point where we could not help speaking. He looked me over in my general effect of base mechanical, and asked me if I had given up the law; I had only to answer him I had, and our conference ended. It was a terrible moment for me, because I knew that in his opinion I had chosen a path in life, which if it did not lead to the Poor House was at least no way to the White House. I suppose now that he thought I had merely gone back to my trade, and so for the time I had; but I have no reason to suppose that he judged my case narrow-mindedly, and I ought to have had the courage to have the affair out with him, and tell him just why I had left the law; we had sometimes talked the English reviews over, for he read them as well as I, and it ought not to have been impossible for me to be frank with him;

but as yet I could not trust any one with my secret hope of some day living for literature, although I had already lived for nothing else.

I preferred the disadvantage which I must be at in his eyes, and in the eyes of most of my fellow-citizens; I believe I had the applause of the organ-builder, who thought the law no calling for me.

In that village there was a social equality which, if not absolute, was as nearly so as can ever be in a competitive civilization; and I could have suffered no slight in the general esteem for giving up a profession and going back to a trade; if I was despised at all it was because I had thrown away the chance of material advancement; I dare say some people thought I was a fool to do that. No one, indeed, could have imagined the rapture it was to do it, or what a load rolled from my shoulders when I dropped the law from them. Perhaps Sinbad or Christian could have conceived of my ecstatic relief; yet so far as the popular vision reached I was not returning to literature, but to the printing business, and I myself felt the difference. My reading had given me criterions different from those of the ****** life of our village, and I did not flatter myself that my calling would have been thought one of great social dignity in the world where I hoped some day to make my living.

My convictions were all democratic, but at heart I am afraid I was a snob, and was unworthy of the honest work which I ought to have felt it an honor to do; this, whatever we falsely pretend to the contrary, is the frame of every one who aspires beyond the work of his hands. I do not know how it had become mine, except through my reading, and I think it was through the devotion I then had for a certain author that I came to a knowledge not of good and evil so much as of common and superfine.

同类推荐
  • 刘子遗书

    刘子遗书

    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。
  • 房中曲

    房中曲

    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。
  • 上古之什补亡训传十

    上古之什补亡训传十

    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。
  • THE END OF

    THE END OF

    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。
  • 白苏斋类集

    白苏斋类集

    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
  • 古兰经故事

    古兰经故事

    《古兰经》是伊斯兰教最神圣的经典。《古兰经故事》中所有的篇幅都是《古兰经》中的历史人物和他们的传闻轶事,主要是穆罕默德之前的历史人物,即历代先知的故事。这些故事在阿拉伯世界和伊斯兰国家普遍流传,可谓家喻户晓,妇孺皆知。确实,先知们光明磊落、公正无私、爱憎分明、疾恶如仇、任劳任怨、积极进取、洁身自重、临危不惧、宽宏坚忍、劝善止恶、敬老爱幼、赈困济贫、意志顽强、信仰忠诚……这些优秀的品质和精神,不光是每一个穆斯林立身处世、待人接物的典范,也是社会生活中人们的基本生活准则。同肘,从故事中讲述的古老部族的兴衰成败,告诫我们要吸取历史的经验和教训……
  • 静而有女其姝

    静而有女其姝

    皇上谕:自古立后皆慎重遴选,使可母仪天下。今后乃睿王于朕幼时因亲定婚,未经选择,宫阃参商已历三载,事上御下,淑善难期,不足仰承宗庙之重。谨于八月二十五日奏闻皇太后,降为静妃,改居侧室。大臣们纷纷议论,问其缘由,皇上答:“无能,故当废!”静姝:福临,我挣扎过,也用力的争取过。我做的每一件事都是问心无愧的,阴差阳错的嫁给你,惊鸿一瞥的爱上你,痛不欲生的放弃你,万念俱灰的接受这一切。其实我对你也有过期望的,我想过你也能牵着我的手看着我们的孩子承欢膝下,也想过有一天你在知晓我是这场政治的穷途送给你噩梦的同时也是真心真意的为你着想。我生来尊贵,却用这一生来完善了这一场政治的悲剧。
  • 快穿之每天起床都看见公主哭唧唧

    快穿之每天起床都看见公主哭唧唧

    你哭着对我说,童话里面都是骗人的。莫信呵呵一笑,进入了有毒童话世界。群号如下:231617363有毒你咬我,全文大概无cp,极度阴暗,慎入
  • 岷山传

    岷山传

    花椒醒来,身边多久两个小豆丁,双胞胎侄子侄女。花椒从此担任一个父母的角色,养大大哥花石斛留下的儿女,顺便花家致富。
  • 霸道总裁王俊凯:狂宠小娇妻

    霸道总裁王俊凯:狂宠小娇妻

    就不该告诉你,其实我这篇是写王俊凯的。请大家多多关照
  • 世界许我一个永远

    世界许我一个永远

    希望能遇到那么一个人,他懂你背后的疲惫,陪你一起度过丰盈的余生。从此风雪再大,也有灯火可亲。
  • 贵族学院:非凡特优生

    贵族学院:非凡特优生

    满怀着梦想的美丽女孩颜依沫,靠着自己的努力,还有天生的好头脑,考进自己梦寐以求的贵族学院圣彼兰卡。在圣彼兰卡学院,他结识了新的好朋友夏晚晴,还有学院的三大王子(凌哲夜,颜雨泽,夏洛辰)……不仅如此,她在学院中,心里还有一个特殊的存在——那就是和他情感逐渐升温的那个学院三大王子之一的凌哲夜………在学院的生活中,一些事情也浮出水面……她其实还有不为人知的身份?她的身份的的是什么?那个莫名感到亲切的颜雨泽又和她有什么关系呢?当爱情就要开花的时候,又怎么会插进来一个未婚妻?颜依沫的爱情就要破灭了吗?敬请期待吧~!
  • 花开与你的半夏

    花开与你的半夏

    希望从校服到婚纱希望从十六岁到六十岁希望从那一年到一辈子
  • 初如果我们勇敢点

    初如果我们勇敢点

    没有想到遇见你,更没想到和你。。。当初的我们勇敢点就好了。
  • 调皮王妃:穿越历险记

    调皮王妃:穿越历险记

    林书渺,二十一世纪一名普通高三狗,没想到突然有一天穿越。不过,这究竟是美梦还是噩梦啊!没有显赫的家世倒也罢了,怎么还有那么多仇敌?!哼,好歹也是受过高等教育的现代人,岂能被一群古人欺负!更何况,她还有着别人无法想象的超级能力,正所谓艺高人胆大,看她手撕白莲花,脚踢蛇蝎女,劫富济贫,除恶扬善~不过,这美男怎么还没怎么撩,就甩都甩不掉了呢?