第 1 节
作者:扑火      更新:2021-02-19 21:35      字数:9321
  THE CHILDREN
  THE CHILDREN
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  THE CHILDREN
  FELLOW TRAVELLERS WITH A
  BIRD; I。
  To    attend    to  a   living   child    is  to  be   baffled    in   your    humour;
  disappointed       of  your    pathos;    and   set  freshly    free  from    all  the   pre…
  occupations。       You cannot anticipate him。          Blackbirds; overheard year by
  year; do not compose the same phrases; never two leitmotifs alike。                      Not
  the  tone;   but   the   note   alters。 So   with   the   uncovenated   ways   of   a   child
  you   keep   no   tryst。    They   meet   you   at   another   place;   after   failing   you
  where you tarried; your former experiences; your documents are at fault。
  You are the fellow traveller of a bird。 The bird alights and escapes out of
  time to your footing。
  No man's fancy could be beforehand; for instance; with a girl of four
  years   old   who   dictated   a   letter   to   a   distant   cousin;   with   the   sweet   and
  unimaginable   message:          〃I   hope   you   enjoy   yourself     with   your   loving
  dolls。〃    A boy; still younger; persuading his mother to come down from
  the heights and play with him on the floor; but sensible; perhaps; that there
  was a dignity to be observed none the less; entreated her; 〃Mother; do be a
  lady   frog。〃    None   ever   said   their   good   things   before   these   indeliberate
  authors。     Even   their   own   kindchildrenhave   not   preceded   them。          No
  child   in   the   past   ever   found   the   same   replies   as   the   girl   of   five   whose
  father made that appeal to feeling which is doomed to a different; perverse;
  and   unforeseen   success。       He   was   rather   tired   with   writing;   and   had   a
  mind   to   snare   some   of   the   yet   uncaptured   flock   of   her   sympathies。   〃Do
  you know; I have been working hard; darling?                  I work to buy things for
  you。〃     〃Do   you   work;〃   she   asked;   〃to   buy   the   lovely   puddin's?〃    Yes;
  even     for  these。    The    subject    must   have    seemed     to  her   to  be   worth
  pursuing。      〃And do you work to buy the fat?            I don't like fat。〃
  The   sympathies;   nevertheless;   are   there。      The   same   child   was   to   be
  soothed at night after a weeping dream that a skater had been drowned in
  the   Kensington   Round   Pond。         It   was   suggested   to   her   that   she   should
  forget it by thinking about the one unfailing and gay subjecther wishes。
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  THE CHILDREN
  〃Do you know;〃 she said; without loss of time; 〃what I should like best in
  all   the   world?    A  thundred   dolls   and   a   whistle!〃     Her   mother   was   so
  overcome by this tremendous numeral; that she could make no offer as to
  the dolls。     But the whistle seemed practicable。             〃It is for me to whistle
  for cabs;〃 said the child; with a sudden moderation; 〃when I go to parties。〃
  Another morning she came down radiant; 〃Did you hear a great noise in
  the miggle of the night?         That was me crying。          I cried because I dreamt
  that Cuckoo 'a brother' had swallowed a bead into his nose。〃
  The mere errors of children are unforeseen as nothing isno; nothing
  femininein this adult world。          〃I've got a lotter than you;〃 is the word of
  a   very   young   egotist。     An   older   child   says;   〃I'd   better   go;   bettern't   I;
  mother?〃       He   calls   a   little   space   at   the   back   of   a   London   house;   〃the
  backy…garden。〃        A   little   creature   proffers   almost   daily   the   reminder   at
  luncheonat   tart…time:   〃Father;   I   hope   you   will   remember   that   I   am   the
  favourite of the crust。〃        Moreover; if an author set himself to invent the
  naif   things   that   children   might   do   in   their   Christmas   plays   at   home;   he
  would   hardly   light   upon   the   device   of   the   little   troupe   who;   having   no
  footlights; arranged upon the floor a long row ofcandle…shades!
  〃It's JOLLY dull without you; mother;〃 says a little girl who gentlest
  of the gentlehas a dramatic sense of slang; of which she makes no secret。
  But   she   drops   her   voice   somewhat   to   disguise   her   feats   of   metathesis;
  about     which    she   has  doubts    and   which     are  involuntary:      the   〃stand…
  wash;〃 the 〃sweeping…crosser;〃 the 〃sewing chamine。〃                   Genoese peasants
  have the same prank when they try to speak Italian。
  Children forget last year so well that if they are Londoners they should
  by any means have an impression of the country or the sea annually。                        A
  London little girl watches a fly upon the wing; follows it with her pointing
  finger; and names it 〃bird。〃         Her brother; who wants to play with a bronze
  Japanese lobster; ask 〃Will you please let me have that tiger?〃
  At times children give to a word that slight variety which is the most
  touching kind of newness。            Thus; a child of three asks you to save him。
  How moving a word; and how freshly said!                 He had heard of the 〃saving〃
  of   other   things   of   interestespecially   chocolate   creams   taken   for   safe…
  keepingand he asks; 〃Who is going to save me to…day?                    Nurse is going
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  THE CHILDREN
  out; will you save me;  mother?〃            The same little variant upon common
  use   is   in   another   child's   courteous   reply   to   a   summons   to   help   in   the
  arrangement of some flowers; 〃I am quite at your ease。〃
  A  child;   unconscious   little   author   of   things   told   in   this   record;   was
  taken lately to see a fellow author of somewhat different standing from her
  own; inasmuch as he is; among other things; a Saturday Reviewer。                    As he
  dwelt in a part of the South…west of the town unknown to her; she noted
  with interest the shops of the neighbourhood as she went; for they might
  be those of the fournisseurs of her friend。             〃That is his bread shop; and
  that   is   his   book   shop。  And   that;   mother;〃   she   said   finally;   with   even
  heightened sympathy; pausing before a blooming parterre of confectionery
  hard by the abode of her man of letters; 〃that; I suppose; is where he buys
  his sugar pigs。〃
  In all her excursions into streets new to her; this same child is intent
  upon a certain questthe quest of a genuine collector。              We have all heard
  of collecting butterflies; of collecting china…dogs; of collecting cocked hats;
  and so forth; but her pursuit gives her a joy that costs her nothing except a
  sharp look…out upon the proper names over all shop…windows。                     No hoard
  was    ever   lighter   than   hers。  〃I  began    three   weeks    ago    next   Monday;
  mother;〃 she says with precision; 〃and I have got thirty…nine。〃                  〃Thirty…
  nine what?〃 〃Smiths。〃
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  THE CHILDREN
  FELLOW TRAVELLERS WITH A
  BIRD。                II。
  The     mere    gathering    of   children's    language     would     be  much     like
  collecting together a handful of flowers that should be all unique; single of
  their   kind。    In   one   thing;   however;   do   children   agree;   and   that   is   the
  rejection   of   most   of   the   conventions   of   the   authors   who   have   reported
  them。     They do not; for example; say 〃me is;〃 their natural reply to 〃are
  you?〃   is   〃I   are。〃 One   child;  pronouncing   sweetly  and   neatly;   will   have
  nothing but the nominative pronoun。 〃Lift I up and let I see it raining;〃 she
  bids; and told that it does not rain; resumes; 〃Lift I up and let I see it not
  raining。〃
  An elder child had a rooted dislike to a brown corduroy suit ordered
  for her by maternal authority。          She wore the garments under protest; and
  with some resentment。          At the same time it was evident that she took no
  pleasure   in   hearing   her   praises   sweetly   sung   by   a   poet;   her   friend。 He
  had imagined the making of this child in the counsels of Heaven; and the
  decreeing of her soft skin; of her brilliant eyes; and of her hair〃a brown
  tress。〃    She   had   gravely   heard   the   words   as   〃a   brown   dress;〃   and   she
  silently    bore    the   poet   a   grudge    for   having