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travels through france and italy-第11章

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To eighteenth century lovers the discussion on duelling will  recall similar talks between Boswell and Johnson; or that between  the lieutenant and Tom in the Seventh Book of Tom Jones; but;  more particularly; the sermon delivered by Johnson on this  subject a propos of General Oglethorpe's story of how he avoided  a duel with Prince Eugene in 1716。 〃We were sitting in company at  table; whence the Prince took up a glass of wine and by a fillip  made some of it fly in Oglethorpe's face。 Here was a nice  dilemma。 To have challenged him instantly might have fixed a  quarrelsome character upon the young soldier: to have taken no  notice of it might have been counted as cowardice。 Oglethorpe;  therefore; keeping his eye on the Prince; and smiling all the  time; as if he took what His Highness had done in jest; said;  〃Mon Prince〃 (I forget the French words he used); 〃that's a good  joke; but we do it much better in England;〃 and threw a whole  glass of wine in the Prince's face。 An old general who sat by  said; 〃Il a bien fait; mon Prince; vous l'avez commence;〃 and  thus all ended in good humour。〃

In Letter XIII。 Smollett settles down to give his correspondents  a detailed description of the territory and people of Nice。 At  one time it was his intention to essay yet another branch of  authorship and to produce a monograph on the natural history;  antiquities; and topography of the town as the capital of this  still unfamiliar littoral; with the late…born modesty of  experience; however; he recoils from a task to which he does not  feel his opportunities altogether adequate。 'See p。 152。' A  quarter of Smollett's original material would embarrass a  〃Guide〃…builder of more recent pattern。

Whenever he got near a coast line Smollett could not refrain from  expressing decided views。 If he had lived at the present day he  would infallibly have been a naval expert; better informed than  most and more trenchant than all; but recognizably one of the  species; artist in words and amateur of ocean…strategy。 'Smollett  had; of course; been surgeon's mate on H。M。S。 Cumberland; 1740…41。'  His first curiosity at Nice was raised concerning the port;  the harbour; the galleys moored within the mole; and the naval  policy of his Sardinian Majesty。 His advice to Victor Amadeus was  no doubt as excellent and as unregarded as the advice of naval  experts generally is。 Of more interest to us is his account of  the slave…galleys。 Among the miserable slaves whom 〃a British  subject cannot behold without horror and compassion;〃 he observes  a Piedmontese count in Turkish attire; reminding the reader of  one of Dumas' stories of a count among the forcats。 To learn that  there were always volunteer oarsmen among these poor outcasts is  to reflect bitterly upon the average happiness of mankind。 As to  whether they wore much worse off than common seamen in the  British navy of the period (who were only in name volunteers and  had often no hope of discharge until they were worn out) under  such commanders as Oakum or Whiffle 'In Roderick Random。' is  another question。 For confirmation of Smollett's account in  matters of detail the reader may turn to Aleman's Guzman  d'Afarache; which contains a first…hand description of the life  on board a Mediterranean slave galley; to Archenholtz's Tableau  d'Italie of 1788; to Stirling Maxwell's Don John of Austria  (1883; i。 95); and more pertinently to passages in the Life of a  Galley Slave by Jean Marteilhe (edited by Miss Betham…Edwards in  1895)。 After serving in the docks at Dunkirk; Marteilhe; as a  confirmed protestant; makes the journey in the chain…gang to  Marseilles; and is only released after many delays in consequence  of the personal interest and intervention of Queen Anne。 If at  the peace of Utrecht in 1713 we had only been as tender about the  case of our poor Catalan allies! Nice at that juncture had just  been returned by France to the safe…keeping of Savoy; so that in  order to escape from French territory; Marteilhe sailed for Nice  in a tartane; and not feeling too safe even there; hurried thence  by Smollett's subsequent route across the Col di Tende。 Many  Europeans were serving at this time in the Turkish or Algerine  galleys。 But the most pitiable of all the galley slaves were  those of the knights of St。 John of Malta。 〃Figure to yourself;〃  wrote Jacob Houblon 'The Houblon Family; 1907 ii。 78。 The  accounts in Evelyn and Goldsmith are probably familiar to the  reader。' about this year; 〃six or seven hundred dirty half…naked  Turks in a small vessel chained to the oars; from which they are  not allowed to stir; fed upon nothing but bad biscuit and water;  and beat about on the most trifling occasion by their most  inhuman masters; who are certainly more Turks than their slaves。〃

After several digressions; one touching the ancient Cemenelion; a  subject upon which the Jonathan Oldbucks of Provence without  exception are unconscionably tedious; Smollett settles down to a  capable historical summary preparatory to setting his palette for  a picture of the Nissards 〃as they are。〃 He was; as we are aware;  no court painter; and the cheerful colours certainly do not  predominate。 The noblesse for all their exclusiveness cannot  escape his censure。 He can see that they are poor (they are  unable to boast more than two coaches among their whole number);  and he feels sure that they are depraved。 He attributes both  vices unhesitatingly to their idleness and to their religion。 In  their singularly unemotional and coolly comparative outlook upon  religion; how infinitely nearer were Fielding and Smollett than  their greatest successors; Dickens and Thackeray; to the modern  critic who observes that there is 〃at present not a single  credible established religion in existence。〃 To Smollett  Catholicism conjures up nothing so vividly as the mask of comedy;  while his native Calvinism stands for the corresponding mask of  tragedy。 'Walpole's dictum that Life was a comedy to those who  think; a tragedy for those who feel; was of later date than this  excellent mot of Smollett's。' Religion in the sunny spaces of the  South is a 〃never…failing fund of pastime。〃 The mass (of which he  tells a story that reminds us of Lever's Micky Free) is just a  mechanism invented by clever rogues for an elaborate system of  petty larceny。 And what a ferocious vein of cynicism underlies  his strictures upon the perverted gallantry of the Mariolaters at  Florence; or those on the two old Catholics rubbing their ancient  gums against St。 Peter's toe for toothache at Rome。 The recurring  emblems of crosses and gibbets simply shock him as mementoes of  the Bagne。

At Rome he compares a presentment of St。 Laurence to 〃a barbecued  pig。〃 〃What a pity it is;〃 he complains; 〃that the labours of  painting should have been employed on such shocking objects of  the martyrology;〃 floggings; nailings; and unnailings。。。 〃Peter writhing on the cross; Stephen battered with stones;  Sebastian stuck full of arrows; Bartholomew flayed alive;〃 and so  on。 His remarks upon the famous Pieta of Michael Angelo are frank  to the point of brutality。 The right of sanctuary and its  〃infamous prerogative;〃 unheard of in England since the d
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