登陆注册
5425200000055

第55章 CHAPTER X--FIELD AND WILD(3)

And there are four kinds of tomtits round here, remember: but we may go on with such talk for ever. Wiser men than we have asked the same question: but Lady Why will not answer them yet.

However, there is another question, which Madam How seems inclined to answer just now, which is almost as deep and mysterious.

What?

HOW all these different kinds of things became different.

Oh, do tell me!

Not I. You must begin at the beginning, before you can end at the end, or even make one step towards the end.

What do you mean?

You must learn the differences between things, before you can find out how those differences came about. You must learn Madam How's alphabet before you can read her book. And Madam How's alphabet of animals and plants is, Species, Kinds of things. You must see which are like, and which unlike; what they are like in, and what they are unlike in. You are beginning to do that with your collection of butterflies. You like to arrange them, and those that are most like nearest to each other, and to compare them.

You must do that with thousands of different kinds of things before you can read one page of Madam How's Natural History Book rightly.

But it will take so much time and so much trouble.

God grant that you may not spend more time on worse matters, and take more trouble over things which will profit you far less. But so it must be, willy-nilly. You must learn the alphabet if you mean to read. And you must learn the value of the figures before you can do a sum. Why, what would you think of any one who sat down to play at cards--for money too (which I hope and trust you never will do)--before he knew the names of the cards, and which counted highest, and took the other?

Of course he would be very foolish.

Just as foolish are those who make up "theories" (as they call them) about this world, and how it was made, before they have found out what the world is made of. You might as well try to find out how this hay-field was made, without finding out first what the hay is made of.

How the hay-field was made? Was it not always a hay-field?

Ah, yes; the old story, my child: Was not the earth always just what it is now? Let us see for ourselves whether this was always a hay-field.

How?

Just pick out all the different kinds of plants and flowers you can find round us here. How many do you think there are?

Oh--there seem to be four or five.

Just as there were three or four kinds of flies in the air. Pick them, child, and count. Let us have facts.

How many? What! a dozen already?

Yes--and here is another, and another. Why, I have got I don't know how many.

Why not? Bring them here, and let us see. Nine kinds of grasses, and a rush. Six kinds of clovers and vetches; and besides, dandelion, and rattle, and oxeye, and sorrel, and plantain, and buttercup, and a little stitchwort, and pignut, and mouse-ear hawkweed, too, which nobody wants.

Why?

Because they are a sign that I am not a good farmer enough, and have not quite turned my Wild into Field.

What do you mean?

Look outside the boundary fence, at the moors and woods; they are forest, Wild--"Wald," as the Germans would call it. Inside the fence is Field--"Feld," as the Germans would call it. Guess why?

Is it because the trees inside have been felled?

Well, some say so, who know more than I. But now go over the fence, and see how many of these plants you can find on the moor.

Oh, I think I know. I am so often on the moor.

I think you would find more kinds outside than you fancy. But what do you know?

That beside some short fine grass about the cattle-paths, there are hardly any grasses on the moor save deer's hair and glade- grass; and all the rest is heath, and moss, and furze, and fern.

Softly--not all; you have forgotten the bog plants; and there are (as I said) many more plants beside on the moor than you fancy.

But we will look into that another time. At all events, the plants outside are on the whole quite different from the hay- field.

Of course: that is what makes the field look green and the moor brown.

Not a doubt. They are so different, that they look like bits of two different continents. Scrambling over the fence is like scrambling out of Europe into Australia. Now, how was that difference made? Think. Don't guess, but think. Why does the rich grass come up to the bank, and yet not spread beyond it?

I suppose because it cannot get over.

Not get over? Would not the wind blow the seeds, and the birds carry them? They do get over, in millions, I don't doubt, every summer.

Then why do they not grow?

Think.

Is there any difference in the soil inside and out?

A very good guess. But guesses are no use without facts. Look.

Oh, I remember now. I know now the soil of the field is brown, like the garden; and the soil of the moor all black and peaty.

Yes. But if you dig down two or three feet, you will find the soils of the moor and the field just the same. So perhaps the top soils were once both alike.

I know.

Well, and what do you think about it now? I want you to look and think. I want every one to look and think. Half the misery in the world comes first from not looking, and then from not thinking. And I do not want you to be miserable.

But shall I be miserable if I do not find out such little things as this.

You will be miserable if you do not learn to understand little things: because then you will not be able to understand great things when you meet them. Children who are not trained to use their eyes and their common sense grow up the more miserable the cleverer they are.

Why?

Because they grow up what men call dreamers, and bigots, and fanatics, causing misery to themselves and to all who deal with them. So I say again, think.

Well, I suppose men must have altered the soil inside the bank.

Well done. But why do you think so?

Because, of course, some one made the bank; and the brown soil only goes up to it.

Well, that is something like common sense. Now you will not say any more, as the cows or the butterflies might, that the hay-field was always there.

And how did men change the soil?

By tilling it with the plough, to sweeten it, and manuring it, to make it rich.

同类推荐
  • 松漠記聞

    松漠記聞

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 宁坤秘笈

    宁坤秘笈

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 野古集

    野古集

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 嘉泰普灯录

    嘉泰普灯录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 圣观自在菩萨不空王秘密心陀罗尼经

    圣观自在菩萨不空王秘密心陀罗尼经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 陆太太好久不见

    陆太太好久不见

    离婚五年后,重回茗江市的知名珠宝设计师郁安夏在某次活动上被媒体围堵:“郁小姐,请问你对前夫陆先生将要再婚的事情有什么看法?”郁安夏菱唇微翘,反问:“难道他没有和你们说将要再婚的妻子姓郁么?!”众媒体一头雾水。次日,一则“恒天集团老总陆翊臣夜宿前妻香闺”的新闻惊现头条!【关于追爱】郁安夏十九岁那年,陆翊臣给了她一场人人称羡的盛世婚礼。二十岁生日当天两人领证,从此她是名副其实的陆太太。可这场童话般的婚姻在领证后只维持了一个月就宣告破灭,她独自一人远走国外。原以为再无交集的两个人,但是......为什么五年前看似冷心冷情的男人再次相遇后恨不得一天二十四小时都在她面前刷存在感?相亲时是他,剪彩现场是他,就连她带着儿子参加亲子活动时还是他!郁安夏说:“我也是有脾气的哦,所以和不和好看心情,复不复婚看你诚意。”次日,威严冷漠最要面子的陆翊臣以爱筑花海,在亲朋好友的见证下屈膝半跪向她告白。【关于宠爱】陆翊臣出生茗江市第一勋贵世家,商场上呼风唤雨的权贵,为人冷漠低调,手段狠厉。他的温暖,只给了郁安夏一人,五年前如此,五年后亦然。两人和好后,一向不接受任何媒体采访的陆先生为了支持陆太太的新作品,破例和她一起出席新品发布会。发布会上媒体问及传得沸沸扬扬的结婚、离婚又将复婚事件:“陆先生,请问您和陆太太当初为什么匆匆结婚又离?为什么多年后再次复合?”陆先生侧头看着陆太太,温柔缱绻:“因为......第一眼是她,从此之后都是她。”【读书指南】1.本文一对一无虐甜宠文,无小三之类乱七八糟生物,有萌宝。2.背景半架空,请勿与现实中任何人物场景对号入座。3.看得开心就好,不喜请绕道,勿喷。。简介无能,请移步正文,喜欢请加入收藏,么么哒!友情推荐:系列文【早安,顾太太】,【你好,南先生】
  • 千年眷恋一念顷心

    千年眷恋一念顷心

    “你给我听好了,本殿下这辈子都不会爱上你。”“嗯?”“唔~”他,君夜寒,日月帝国太子,天众奇才,默默惦记了蓝樱辰几十年,好不容易丫头长大了,身边还围了那么多男人,那个蓝逸尘,离我家丫头远点,那个什么帝辞渊和洛长空别以为是丫头师父我就不敢对你们怎么样了,还有那个孙无缺好好的没事给丫头找那么多师兄干嘛。我,蓝樱辰,紫流七绝之一,从小便是集万千宠爱于一人,我一直自命不凡,我知道,不管是逸尘,还是泽宇,三师兄,大师兄,二师兄,还有他都为我付出了许多,但是,对不起……命运总是让人捉摸不透,历史的洪流会掩埋世界的真相,命运指引我们相遇……逆天开挂少女&桀骜不驯少年
  • 向日葵寻梦记

    向日葵寻梦记

    一直被禁锢束缚的向日葵,遇到启蒙他的林汐湘和指引他的杨光,最后终于梦想成功的故事。
  • 神女天骄

    神女天骄

    被分宝崖砸中,看唐曦如何在大唐掀起一场腥风血雨,看她又如何拯救那些凄惨的红颜祸水,改变她们的命运。
  • 前几年的那些人和事

    前几年的那些人和事

    李二和穿越了,这个穿越的故事中,李二和的前世妻子离他而去,他失去了前世相濡以沫的妻子,可爱的一双儿女。尽管他是世界首富,可是这样的穿越有个鸟用,结果醒来却是场春梦。穿越历程才刚刚开始
  • 每个孩子都应该知道的世界伟大传奇

    每个孩子都应该知道的世界伟大传奇

    《每个孩子都应该知道的(世界伟大传奇)》收录《国王的史诗》《奇妙的中世纪神话》、《挪威流行故事》、《意大利古老传说》中耳熟能详的篇章以及华盛顿?欧文所著的《李伯大梦》、《睡谷传说》等等经典传奇故事,文学色彩浓厚,极大的拓展了青少年读者的知识面,是一本能真正接触经典文学的好书。译者在忠实原著的基础上,对这些耳熟能详的故事进行重新润色,使得《每个孩子都应该知道的(世界伟大传奇)》更具平易性与亲和力;同时,其横向分类对青少年读者的文学修养和阅读能力有针对性的提升。
  • 爱你不是件容易的事

    爱你不是件容易的事

    她,苦等留学男友三年,结果男友结婚了,新娘不是她。偶然遇见的那个大叔,据说杀过人,还坐过牢,但他又像迷一样时时出现在左右。原本以为自己所知便是他的全部,却不知道他并不像知道的那样而已。曾经深爱过,又曾经深深的被人伤害过,他和她是否能在静默的岁月长河里简单的彼此相爱。因为,爱上一个人并不是件容易的事。
  • 金刚沙

    金刚沙

    车是郑荣峰开的,黄敏华、王玉娥、吕德和廖育兴一起坐在车上。一路上他们有说有笑的,车过银溪路段时,廖育兴还挺开心地说了句,“不知道母校还记不记得我们的样子……”大家都呵呵一笑。笑声刚落,郑荣峰的皇冠车突然一滑,“糟糕,车胎爆了!”郑荣峰急刹车,皇冠歪着身子减速,后面一部帕萨特箭一般撞了上去。皇冠翻倒,肚皮朝上,在高速路上像陀螺一样转了几圈。廖育兴弹出了车外,估计帕萨特撞击皇冠的位置正对他的座位。其他人死里逃生,仅受轻伤。我赶到银溪医院时,王玉娥哭着向我说了当时的情景。
  • 穿越时空之君王爱

    穿越时空之君王爱

    她是南诏国的公主,有倾城倾国的容貌。可因为她倾世的容颜,惹得天下大乱,狼烟四起。世间再无宁日,三界再无她立足之地。不仅因为她倾世的容颜,更因为她神秘的身份。人、魔、神三界大乱。王朝、疆域、拯救。不到最后,谁又知鹿死谁手……
  • 快穿之你在我心里

    快穿之你在我心里

    机关算尽,没有巧合一个是疯子女神,一个是一贫如洗小可怜一切的一切都汇聚为终点女神骗走小可怜,小可怜成为小疯子的大宝贝