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travels through france and italy-第10章

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f  Armida for a native of one of the dampest corners of North  Britain。

〃Forty or fifty years ago; before the great transformation took  place on the French Riviera; when Nizza; Villafranca; and Mentone  were antique Italian towns; and when it was one of the  eccentricities of Lord Brougham; to like Cannes; all that sea…board  was a delightful land。 Only a hundred years ago Arthur Young had trouble to get an old woman and a donkey to carry his  portmanteau from Cannes to Antibes。 I can myself remember Cannes  in 1853; a small fishing village with a quiet beach; and Mentone;  a walled town with mediaeval gates and a castle; a few humble  villas and the old Posta to give supper to any passing traveller。  It was one of the loveliest bits of Italy; and the road from  Nizza to Genoa was one long procession for four days of glorious  scenery; historic remnants; Italian colour; and picturesque  ports。 From the Esterelles to San Remo this has all been ruined  by the horde of northern barbarians who have made a sort of  Trouville; Brighton; or Biarritz; with American hotels and  Parisian boulevards on every headland and bay。 First came the  half underground railway; a long tunnel with lucid intervals;  which destroyed the road by blocking up its finest views and  making it practically useless。 Then miles of unsightly  caravanserais high walls; pompous villas; and Parisian grandes  rues crushed out every trace of Italy; of history; and pictorial  charm。〃 So writes Mr。 Frederic Harrison of this delectable coast;  'In the Daily Chronicle; 15th March 1898。' as it was; at a period  within his own recollectiona period at which it is hardly  fanciful to suppose men living who might just have remembered  Smollett; as he was in his last days; when he returned to die on  the Riviera di Levante in the autumn of 1771。 Travel had then  still some of the elements of romance。 Rapidity has changed all  that。 The trouble is that although we can transport our bodies so  much more rapidly than Smollett could; our understanding travels  at the same old pace as before。 And in the meantime railway and  tourist agencies have made of modern travel a kind of mental  postcard album; with grand hotels on one side; hotel menus on the  other; and a faint aroma of continental trains haunting; between  the leaves as it were。 Our real knowledge is still limited to the  country we have walked over; and we must not approach the country  we would appreciate faster than a man may drive a horse or propel  a bicycle; or we shall lose the all…important sense of artistic  approach。 Even to cross the channel by time…table is fatal to  that romantic spirit (indispensable to the true magic of travel)  which a slow adjustment of the mind to a new social atmosphere  and a new historical environment alone can induce。 Ruskin; the  last exponent of the Grand Tour; said truly that the benefit of  travel varies inversely in proportion to its speed。 The cheap rapidity which has made our villes de plaisir and cotes d'azur  what they are; has made unwieldy boroughs of suburban villages;  and what the rail has done for a radius of a dozen miles; the  motor is rapidly doing for one of a score。 So are we sped! But we  are to discuss not the psychology of travel; but the immediate  causes and circumstances of Smollett's arrival upon the territory  of Nice。

VI

Smollett did not interpret the ground…plan of the history of Nice  particularly well。 Its colonisation from Massilia; its long  connection with Provence; its occupation by Saracens; its stormy  connection with the house of Anjou; and its close fidelity to the  house of Savoy made no appeal to his admiration。 The most  important event in its recent history; no doubt; was the capture  of the city by the French under Catinat in 1706 (Louis XIV。 being  especially exasperated against what he regarded as the treachery  of Victor Amadeus); and the razing to the ground of its famous  citadel。 The city henceforth lost a good deal of its civic  dignity; and its morale was conspicuously impaired。 In the war of  the Austrian succession an English fleet under Admiral Matthews  was told off to defend the territory of the Nicois against the  attentions of Toulon。 This was the first close contact  experienced between England and Nice; but the impressions formed  were mutually favourable。 The inhabitants were enthusiastic about  the unaccustomed English plan of paying in full for all supplies  demanded。 The British officers were no less delighted with the  climate of Nice; the fame of which they carried to their northern  homes。 It was both directly and indirectly through one of these  officers that the claims of Nice as a sanatorium came to be put  so plainly before Smollett。 'Losing its prestige as a ville  forte; Nice was henceforth rapidly to gain the new character of a  ville de plaisir。 In 1763; says one of the city's historians;  Smollett; the famous historian and novelist; visited Nice。  〃Arriving here shattered in health and depressed in spirits;  under the genial influence of the climate he soon found himself a  new man。 His notes on the country; its gardens; its orange  groves; its climate without a winter; are pleasant and just and  would seem to have been written yesterday instead of more than a  hundred years ago。 。 。 。 His memory is preserved in the street  nomenclature of the place; one of the thoroughfares still bears  the appellation of Rue Smollett。〃 (James Nash; The Guide to Nice;  1884; p。 110。)'

Among other celebrated residents at Nice during the period of  Smollett's visit were Edward Augustus; Duke of York; the brother  of George III。; who died at Monaco a few years later; and Andre  Massena; a native of the city; then a lad of six。

Before he left Montpellier Smollett indulged in two more  seemingly irresistible tirades against French folly: one against  their persistent hero…worship of such a stuffed doll as Louis le  Grand; and the second in ridicule of the immemorial French  panacea; a bouillon。 Now he gets to Nice he feels a return of the  craving to take a hand's turn at depreciatory satire upon the  nation of which a contemporary hand was just tracing the  deservedly better…known delineation; commencing

Gay sprightly land of mirth and social ease; Pleas'd with thyself; whom all the world can please。 。 。 。

Such inveteracy (like Dr。 Johnson's against Swift) was not  unnaturally suspected by friends in England of having some  personal motive。 In his fifteenth letter home; therefore;  Smollett is assiduous in disclaiming anything of the kind。 He  begins by attempting an amende honorable; but before he has got  well away from his exordium he insensibly and most  characteristically diverges into the more congenial path of  censure; and expands indeed into one of his most eloquent  passagesa disquisition upon the French punctilio (conceived upon  lines somewhat similar to Mercutio's address to Benvolio); to  which is appended a satire on the duello as practised in France;  which glows and burns with a radiation of good sense; racy of  Smollett at his best。

To eighteenth century lovers the discussion on duelling will  recall similar talks between Boswell and Johnson; or that between  the lieutenant and Tom in th
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