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travels through france and italy-第16章

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le past civilization; such as  the Pont du Gard。 His views of art; too; as well as his views of  life; are profoundly influenced by his early training as a  surgeon。 He is not inclined by temperament to be sanguine。 His  gaze is often fixed; like that of a doctor; upon the end of life;  and of art; as of nature; he takes a decidedly pathological view。  Yet; upon the whole; far from deriding his artistic impressions;  I think we shall be inclined rather to applaud them; as well for  their sanity as for their undoubted sincerity。

For the return journey to Florence Smollett selected the  alternative route by Narni; Terni; Spoleto; Foligno; Perugia; and  Arezzo; and; by his own account; no traveller ever suffered quite  so much as he did from 〃dirt;〃 〃vermin;〃 〃poison;〃 and imposture。  At Foligno; where Goethe also; in his travels a score of years or  so later; had an amusing adventure; Smollett was put into a room  recently occupied by a wild beast (bestia); but the bestia turned  out on investigation to be no more or no less than an 〃English  heretic。〃 The food was so filthy that it might have turned the  stomach of a muleteer; their coach was nearly shattered to  pieces; frozen with cold and nearly devoured by rats。 Mrs。  Smollett wept in silence with horror and fatigue; and the bugs  gave the Doctor a whooping…cough。 If Smollett anticipated a  violent death from exhaustion and chagrin in consequence of these  tortures he was completely disappointed。 His health was never  better;so much so that he felt constrained in fairness to drink  to the health of the Roman banker who had recommended this  nefarious route。 'See the Doctor's remarks at the end of Letter  XXXV。' By Florence and Lerici he retraced his steps to Nice early  in 1765; and then after a brief jaunt to Turin (where he met  Sterne) and back by the Col di Tende; he turned his face  definitely homewards。 The journey home confirmed his liking for  Pisa; and gives an opening for an amusing description of the  Britisher abroad (Letter XXXV)。 We can almost overhear Thackeray;  or the author of Eothen; touching this same topic in Letter XLI。  〃When two natives of any other country chance to meet abroad;  they run into each other's embrace like old friends; even though  they have never heard of one another till that moment; whereas  two Englishmen in the same situation maintain a mutual reserve  and diffidence; and keep without the sphere of each other's  attraction; like two bodies endowed with a repulsive power。〃  Letter XXXVI gives opportunity for some discerning remarks on  French taxation。 Having given the French king a bit of excellent  advice (that he should abolish the fermiers generaux); Smollett  proceeds; in 1765; to a forecast of probabilities which is deeply  significant and amazingly shrewd。 The fragment known as  Smollett's Dying Prophecy of 1771 has often been discredited。 Yet  the substance of it is fairly adumbrated here in the passage  beginning; 〃There are undoubtedly many marks of relaxation in the  reins of French government;〃 written fully six years previously。  After a pleasing description of Grasse; 〃famous for its pomatum;  gloves; wash…balls; perfumes; and toilette boxes lined with  bergamot;〃 the homeward traveller crossed the French frontier at  Antibes; and in Letter XXXIX at Marseille; he compares the galley  slaves of France with those of Savoy。 At Bath where he had gone  to set up a practice; Smollett once astonished the faculty by  〃proving〃 in a pamphlet that the therapeutic properties of  the waters had been prodigiously exaggerated。 So; now; in the  south of France he did not hesitate to pronounce solemnly that  〃all fermented liquors are pernicious to the human constitution。〃  Elsewhere he comments upon the immeasurable appetite of the French for bread。 The Frenchman will recall the story of the  peasant…persecuting baron whom Louis XII。 provided with a  luxurious feast; which the lack of bread made uneatable; he may  not have heard a story told me in Liege at the Hotel Charlemagne  of the Belgian who sought to conciliate his French neighbour by  remarking; 〃Je vois que vous etes Fran鏰is; monsieur; parceque  vous mangez beaucoup de pain;〃 and the Frenchman's retort; 〃Je  vois que vous etes lye monsieur; parceque vous mangez beaucoup  de tout!〃 From Frejus  Smollett proceeds to Toulon; repeating the old epigram that 〃the  king of France is greater at Toulon than at Versailles。〃 The  weather is so pleasant that the travellers enjoy a continual  concert of 〃nightingales〃 from Vienne to Fontainebleau。 The  〃douche〃 of Aix…les…Bains having been explained; Smollett and his  party proceeded agreeably to Avignon; where by one of the strange  coincidences of travel he met his old voiturier Joseph 〃so  embrowned by the sun that he might have passed for an Iroquois。〃  In spite of Joseph's testimonial the 〃plagues of posting〃 are  still in the ascendant; and Smollett is once more generous of  good advice。 Above all; he adjures us when travelling never to  omit to carry a hammer and nails; a crowbar; an iron pin or two;  a large knife; and a bladder of grease。 Why not a lynch pin;  which we were so carefully instructed how to inquire about in  Murray's Conversation for Travellers?

But…the history of his troublous travels is drawing to an end。  From Lyons the route is plain through Macon; Chalons; Dijon;  Auxerre; Sells; and Fontainebleauthe whole itinerary almost  exactly anticipates that of Talfourd's Vacation Tour one hundred  and ten years later; except that on the outward journey Talfourd  sailed down the Rhone。

Smollett's old mental grievances and sores have been shifted and  to some extent; let us hope; dissipated by his strenuous  journeyings; and in June 1765; after an absence of two years; he  is once more enabled to write;

〃You cannot imagine what pleasure I feel while I survey the white  cliffs of Dover at this distance 'from Boulogne'。 Not that I am  at all affected by the nescio qua dulcedine natalis soli of  Horace。

〃That seems to be a kind of fanaticism; founded on the prejudices  of education; which induces a Laplander to place the terrestrial  paradise among the snows of Norway; and a Swiss to prefer the  barren mountains of Soleure to the fruitful plains of Lombardy。 I  am attached to my country; because it is the land of liberty;  cleanliness; and convenience; but I love it still more tenderly;  as the scene of all my interesting connections; as the habitation  of my friends; for whose conversation; correspondence; and esteem  I wish alone to live。〃

For the time being it cannot be doubted that the hardships  Smollett had to undergo on his Italian journey; by sea and land;  and the violent passions by which he was agitated owing to the  conduct of refractory postilions and extortionate innkeepers;  contributed positively to brace up and invigorate his  constitution。 He spoke of himself indeed as 〃mended by ill…treatment〃  not unlike Tavernier; the famous traveller;said to  have been radically cured of the gout by a Turkish aga in Egypt;  who gave him the bastinado because he would not look at the head  of the bashaw of Cairo。 But Fizes was right after all in his  swan…prescription; for poor Smollett's cure was anythin
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