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the spirit of place and other essays-第3章

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They will not let Stella go gay; because of sentiment; and they will

not let Mrs。 Dingley go gay; because of sentiment for Stella。  Marry

come up!  Why did not the historians assign all the tender passages

(taken very seriously) to Stella; and let Dingley have the jokes;

then?  That would have been no ill share for Dingley。  But no;

forsooth; Dingley is allowed nothing。



There are passages; nevertheless; which can hardly be taken from

her。  For now and then Swift parts his dear MD。  When he does so he

invariably drops those initials and writes 〃Stella〃 or 〃Ppt〃 for the

one; and 〃D〃 or 〃Dingley〃 for the other。  There is no exception to

this anywhere。  He is anxious about Stella's 〃little eyes;〃 and

about her health generally; whereas Dingley is strong。  Poor Ppt; he

thinks; will not catch the 〃new fever;〃 because she is not well;

〃but why should D escape it; pray?〃  And Mrs。 Dingley is rebuked for

her tale of a journey from Dublin to Wexford。  〃I doubt; Madam

Dingley; you are apt to lie in your travels; though not so bad as

Stella; she tells thumpers。〃  Stella is often reproved for her

spelling; and Mrs。 Dingley writes much the better hand。  But she is

a puzzle…headed woman; like another。  〃What do you mean by my fourth

letter; Madam Dinglibus?  Does not Stella say you had my fifth;

goody Blunder?〃  〃Now; Mistress Dingley; are you not an impudent

slut to except a letter next packet?  Unreasonable baggage!  No;

little Dingley; I am always in bed by twelve; and I take great care

of myself。〃  〃You are a pretending slut; indeed; with your ‘fourth'

and ‘fifth' in the margin; and your ‘journal' and everything。  O

Lord; never saw the like; we shall never have done。〃  〃I never saw

such a letter; so saucy; so journalish; so everything。〃  Swift is

insistently grateful for their inquiries for his health。  He pauses

seriously to thank them in the midst of his prattle。  Both women

MDare rallied on their politics:  〃I have a fancy that Ppt is a

Tory; I fancy she looks like one; and D a sort of trimmer。〃



But it is for Dingley separately that Swift endured a wild bird in

his lodgings。  His man Patrick had got one to take over to her in

Ireland。  〃He keeps it in a closet; where it makes a terrible

litter; but I say nothing; I am as tame as a clout。〃



Forgotten Dingley; happy in this; has not had to endure the

ignominy; in a hundred essays; to be retrospectively offered to

Swift as an unclaimed wife; so far so good。  But two hundred years

is long for her to have gone stripped of so radiant a glory as is

hers by right。  〃Better; thanks to MD's prayers;〃 wrote the immortal

man who loved her; in a private fragment of a journal; never meant

for Dingley's eyes; nor for Ppt's; nor for any human eyes; and the

rogue Stella has for two centuries stolen all the credit of those

prayers; and all the thanks of that pious benediction。







SOLITUDE







The wild man is alone at will; and so is the man for whom

civilization has been kind。  But there are the multitudes to whom

civilization has given little but its reaction; its rebound; its

chips; its refuse; its shavings; sawdust and waste; its failures; to

them solitude is a right foregone or a luxury unattained; a right

foregone; we may name it; in the case of the nearly savage; and a

luxury unattained in the case of the nearly refined。  These has the

movement of the world thronged together into some blind by…way。



Their share in the enormous solitude which is the common; unbounded;

and virtually illimitable possession of all mankind has lapsed;

unclaimed。  They do not know it is theirs。  Of many of their

kingdoms they are ignorant; but of this most ignorant。  They have

not guessed that they own for every man a space inviolate; a place

of unhidden liberty and of no obscure enfranchisement。  They do not

claim even the solitude of closed corners; the narrow privacy of the

lock and key; nor could they command so much。  For the solitude that

has a sky and a horizon they know not how to wish。



It lies in a perpetual distance。  England has leagues thereof;

landscapes; verge beyond verge; a thousand thousand places in the

woods; and on uplifted hills。  Or rather; solitudes are not to be

measured by miles; they are to be numbered by days。  They are

freshly and freely the dominion of every man for the day of his

possession。  There is loneliness for innumerable solitaries。  As

many days as there are in all the ages; so many solitudes are there

for men。  This is the open house of the earth; no one is refused。

Nor is the space shortened or the silence marred because; one by

one; men in multitudes have been alone there before。  Solitude is

separate experience。  Nay; solitudes are not to be numbered by days;

but by men themselves。  Every man of the living and every man of the

dead might have had his 〃privacy of light。〃



It needs no park。  It is to be found in the merest working country;

and a thicket may be as secret as a forest。  It is not so difficult

to get for a time out of sight and earshot。  Even if your solitude

be enclosed; it is still an open solitude; so there be 〃no cloister

for the eyes;〃 and a space of far country or a cloud in the sky be

privy to your hiding…place。  But the best solitude does not hide at

all。



This the people who have drifted together into the streets live

whole lives and never know。  Do they suffer from their deprivation

of even the solitude of the hiding…place?  There are many who never

have a whole hour alone。  They live in reluctant or indifferent

companionship; as people may in a boarding…house; by paradoxical

choice; familiar with one another and not intimate。  They live under

careless observation and subject to a vagabond curiosity。  Theirs is

the involuntary and perhaps the unconscious loss which is futile and

barren。



One knows the men; and the many women; who have sacrificed all their

solitude to the perpetual society of the school; the cloister; or

the hospital ward。  They walk without secrecy; candid; simple;

visible; without moods; unchangeable; in a constant communication

and practice of action and speech。  Theirs assuredly is no barren or

futile loss; and they have a conviction; and they bestow the

conviction; of solitude deferred。



Who has painted solitude so that the solitary seemed to stand alone

and inaccessible?  There is the loneliness of the shepherdess in

many a drawing of J。F。 Millet。  The little figure is away; aloof。

The girl stands so when the painter is gone。  She waits so on the

sun for the closing of the hours of pasture。  Millet has her as she

looks; out of sight。



Now; although solitude is a prepared; secured; defended; elaborate

possession of the rich; they too deny themselves the natural

solitude of a woman with a child。  A newly…born child is so nursed

and talked about; handled and jolted and carried about by aliens;

and there is so much importunate service going forward; that a woman

is ha
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