登陆注册
5587000000056

第56章

"My father was an American, my mother English. I was born near Epsom and lived there ten years. Then my father had property left him in Massachusetts, and we went to Boston. Both my parents educated me, and began very early. I observe that most parents are babies at teaching, compared with mine. My father was a linguist, and taught me to lisp German, French, and English; my mother was an ideaed woman: she taught me three rarities--attention, observation, and accuracy. If I went a walk in the country, I had to bring her home a budget: the men and women on the road, their dresses, appearance, countenances, and words; every kind of bird in the air, and insect and chrysalis in the hedges; the crops in the fields, the flowers and herbs on the banks. If I walked in the town, Imust not be eyes and no eyes; woe betide me if I could only report the dresses! Really, I have known me, when I was but eight, come home to my mother laden with details, when perhaps an untrained girl of eighteen could only have specified that she had gone up and down a thoroughfare.

Another time mother would take me on a visit: next day, or perhaps next week, she would expect me to describe every article of furniture in her friend's room, and the books on the table, and repeat the conversation, the topics at all events. She taught me to master history _accurately._To do this she was artful enough to turn sport into science. She utilized a game: young people in Boston play it. A writes an anecdote on paper, or perhaps produces it in print. She reads it off to B. B goes away, and writes it down by memory; then reads her writing out to C. C has to listen, and convey her impression to paper. This she reads to D, and Dgoes and writes it. Then the original story and D's version are compared;and, generally speaking, the difference of the two is a caution-- against oral tradition. When the steps of deviation are observed, it is quite a study.

"My mother, with her good wit, saw there was something better than fun to be got out of this. She trained my memory of great things with it. She began with striking passages of history, and played the game with father and me. But as my power of retaining, and repeating correctly, grew by practice, she enlarged the business, and kept enriching my memory, so that I began to have tracts of history at my fingers' ends. As I grew older, she extended the sport to laws and the great public controversies in religion, politics, and philosophy that have agitated the world. But here she had to get assistance from her learned friends. She was a woman valued by men of intellect, and she had no mercy--milked jurists, physicians, and theologians and historians all into my little pail. To be sure, they were as kind about it as she was unscrupulous. They saw I was a keen student, and gave my mother many a little gem in writing. She read them out to me: I listened hard, and thus I fixed many great and good things in my trained memory; and repeated them against the text: I was never allowed to see _that._"With this sharp training, school subjects were child's play to me, and Iwon a good many prizes very easily. My mother would not let me waste a single minute over music. She used to say 'Music extracts what little brains a girl has. Open the piano, you shut the understanding.' I am afraid I bore you with my mother.""Not at all, not at all. I admire her."

"Oh, thank you! thank you, sir! She never uses big words; so it is only of late I have had the _nous_ to see how wise she is. She corrected the special blots of the female character in me, and it is sweet to me to talk of that dear friend. What would I give to see her here!

"Well, then, sir, she made me, as far as she could, a--what shall I say?

a kind of little intellectual gymnast, fit to begin any study; but she left me to choose my own line. Well, I was for natural history first;began like a girl; gathered wild flowers and simples at Epsom, along with an old woman; she discoursed on their traditional virtues, and knew little of their real properties: _that_ I have discovered since.

"From herbs to living things; never spared a chrysalis, but always took it home and watched it break into wings. Hung over the ponds in June, watching the eggs of the frog turn to tadpoles, and the tadpoles to Johnny Crapaud. I obeyed Scripture in one thing, for I studied the ants and their ways.

"I collected birds' eggs. At nine, not a boy in the parish could find more nests in a day than I could. With birdnesting, buying, and now and then begging, I made a collection that figures in a museum over the water, and is entitled 'Eggs of British Birds.' The colors attract, and people always stop at it. But it does no justice whatever to the great variety of sea-birds' eggs on the coast of Britain.

"When I had learned what little they teach in schools, especially drawing, and that is useful in scientific pursuits, I was allowed to choose my own books, and attend lectures. One blessed day I sat and listened to Agassiz--ah! No tragedy well played, nor opera sung, ever moved a heart so deeply as he moved mine, that great and earnest man, whose enthusiasm for nature was as fresh as my own, and his knowledge a thousand times larger. Talk of heaven opening to the Christian pilgrim as he passes Jordan! Why, God made earth as well as heaven, and it is worthy of the Architect; and it is a joy divine when earth opens to the true admirer of God's works. Sir, earth opened to me, as Agassiz discoursed.

"I followed him about like a little bloodhound, and dived into the libraries after each subject he treated or touched.

同类推荐
  • 灵宝归空诀

    灵宝归空诀

    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。
  • 清光绪朝中日交涉史料选辑

    清光绪朝中日交涉史料选辑

    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。
  • 全唐诗话续编

    全唐诗话续编

    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。
  • 陈秋岩诗集

    陈秋岩诗集

    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。
  • A CONFESSION

    A CONFESSION

    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
  • 将门有女定乾坤

    将门有女定乾坤

    人生若只如初见,何事秋风悲画扇。无一是例外,无一不是例外。我喜欢江湖纵歌,你喜欢朝堂权贵。帮你扫清障碍,助你登基,只因是你。爱上你无可厚非,也深情不悔,如果有可能下辈子不要再遇见了,这辈子陪你走完这一程山水,就足够了。
  • 他乡明月:柯岩文集第二卷

    他乡明月:柯岩文集第二卷

    本书是柯岩作品集第二卷,包含小说《他乡明月》。写的是20世纪80年代“新移民”的悲怆故事。歌舞团年轻貌美的女孩紫薇和朵拉为了报复团长对她们的打击,愤而出国,毫无思想准备的他们以为美国会是施展才华,实现理想的天堂,而弱肉强食的现实终于给他们开了一个悲剧式的玩笑。
  • 绝脉武神

    绝脉武神

    易辰——一个蓝带世家天生绝脉的废材少爷。他凭惊人的毅力,历九死而涅槃,修不灭金身,炼混沌圣体,诛仙灭神,高歌猛进,踏上神坛巅峰。(本人新书《万域独尊》已经发表签约,请诸君能够抽空支持!)
  • 辋川集二十首·文杏

    辋川集二十首·文杏

    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。
  • 魔语苍生

    魔语苍生

    念你成佛,念你入魔!凡俗陈规就是要来打破的,爱你哪怕天要压我,我也要掀翻这天!
  • 总裁在上:娇妻太惹火

    总裁在上:娇妻太惹火

    江熙媛说,“我喜欢能干的人。”真相撕开,再无温存。他冷漠无情,“什么都可以给你,除了爱。”她亦倔强,“心还你,命给我。”痴心纠缠,到头来尽是累累伤痕。
  • 医神梦

    医神梦

    一首歌定情,再次见面便提亲。双方的性格都有所改变。“熙儿你可以在唱一次《梨花妆带半面殇》吗?我现在想听。”“好,我现在就唱给你听。”哭道。
  • 微风正好入我怀

    微风正好入我怀

    二“渣”相争,必有一伤。学渣卜微微,不能说太差吧,反正倒数都有她,学啥啥不行,吃饭睡觉第一名,尤其是对吃的,那是尤其得热衷啊!好不容易谈一段恋爱,没想到遇到了这么个男的……“渣男”洛淮,前期有那么一丢丢的渣,但是绝对很宠卜微微,学习是班上数一数二的,但是一谈恋爱,也是个傻子,到最后,还是人家女生主动(亲妈表示看不起)……二渣的爱恨情仇,是走向成功还是极端……
  • 羽夜笙歌

    羽夜笙歌

    “我有很努力的找你了……真的。”——纪央笙“没事,我找到你就好了。抱歉,我没有第一时间找到你。”——月绯怜“我觉得可以啊,要是他们敢欺负你,你就说你是月绯娴的人。”——月绯娴“那怎么成,我等了你这么久,不做我的媳妇有些说不过去吧?”——苏颜慕“娅昔,这个世界上,没有人可以伤害你。”——莫玖风维“当你有了那个爱的人,你的生死都是为了他,所以我要活下去。”——莫玖娅昔
  • 快穿修复:男神,我投降

    快穿修复:男神,我投降

    [1V1,甜宠]温柔医仙:药可救人,毒可杀人。你是我的药,亦是我的毒,我的生死在你一念之间。性感男模:在你之前,我的一切奉献给了舞台;有你之后,我的一切属于你。T台上的灯光再美,也不及你半分。酷拽竹马:我很荣幸,与你一起成长,见证你的所有,也伴你一起白头。……顾槿夕(女主):一代女侠、跳脱作家、软萌青梅……待解锁:温柔医仙、性感男模、酷拽竹马……欢迎入坑(PS:不喜勿喷。)