第 26 节
作者:老是不进球      更新:2021-02-20 14:50      字数:9322
  he must make gold; because; though he squandered all his money; he
  had always money in hand; and that he kept a 〃devil's…bird;〃 a
  familiar spirit; in the pommel of that famous long sword of his;
  which he was only too ready to lug out on provocationthe said
  spirit; Agoth by name; being probably only the laudanum bottle with
  which he worked so many wondrous cures; and of which; to judge from
  his writings; he took only too freely himself。
  But the charm of Paracelsus is in his humour; his mother…wit。  He
  was blamed for consorting with boors in pot…houses; blamed for
  writing in racy German; instead of bad school…Latin:   but you can
  hardly read a chapter; either of his German or his dog…Latin;
  without finding many a good thingwitty and weighty; though often
  not a little coarse。  He talks in parables。  He draws illustrations;
  like Socrates of old; from the commonest and the oddest matters to
  enforce the weightiest truths。  〃Fortune and misfortune;〃 he says;
  for instance nobly enough; 〃are not like snow and wind; they must be
  deduced and known from the secrets of nature。  Therefore misfortune
  is ignorance; fortune is knowledge。  The man who walks out in the
  rain is not unfortunate if he gets a ducking。〃
  〃Nature;〃 he says again; 〃makes the text; and the medical man adds
  the gloss; but the two fit each other no better than a dog does a
  bath;〃 and again; when he is arguing against the doctors who hated
  chemistry〃Who hates a thing which has hurt nobody?  Will you
  complain of a dog for biting you; if you lay hold of his tail?  Does
  the emperor send the thief to the gallows; or the thing which he has
  stolen?  The thief; I think。  Therefore science should not be
  despised on account of some who know nothing about it。〃  You will
  say the reasoning is not very clear; and indeed the passage; like
  too many more; smacks strongly of wine and laudanum。  But such is
  his quaint racy style。  As humorous a man; it seems to me; as you
  shall meet with for many a day; and where there is humour there is
  pretty sure to be imagination; tenderness; and depth of heart。
  As for his notions of what a man of science should be; the servant
  of God; and of Naturewhich is the work of Godusing his powers
  not for money; not for ambition; but in love and charity; as he
  says; for the good of his fellow…manon that matter Paracelsus is
  always noble。  All that Mr。 Browning has conceived on that point;
  all the noble speeches which he has put into Paracelsus's mouth; are
  true to his writings。  How can they be otherwise; if Mr。 Browning
  set them fortha genius as accurate and penetrating as he is wise
  and pure?
  But was Paracelsus a drunkard after all?
  Gentlemen; what concern is that of yours or mine?  I have gone into
  the question; as Mr。 Browning did; cannot say; and don't care to
  say。
  Oporinus; who slandered him so cruelly; recanted when Paracelsus was
  dead; and sang his praisestoo late。  But I do not read that he
  recanted the charge of drunkenness。  His defenders allow it; only
  saying that it was the fault not of him alone; but of all Germans。
  But if so; why was he specially blamed for what certainly others did
  likewise?  I cannot but fear from his writings; as well as from
  common report; that there was something wrong with the man。  I say
  only something。  Against his purity there never was a breath of
  suspicion。  He was said to care nothing for women; and even that was
  made the subject of brutal jests and lies。  But it may have been
  that; worn out with toil and poverty; he found comfort in that
  laudanum which he believed to be the arcanumthe very elixir of
  life; that he got more and more into the habit of exciting his
  imagination with the narcotic; and then; it may be; when the fit of
  depression followed; he strung his nerves up again by wine。  It may
  have been so。  We have had; in the last generation; an exactly
  similar case in a philosopher; now I trust in heaven; and to whose
  genius I owe too much to mention his name here。
  But that Paracelsus was a sot I cannot believe。  That face of his;
  as painted by the great Tintoretto; is not the face of a drunkard;
  quack; bully; but of such a man as Browning has conceived。  The
  great globular brain; the sharp delicate chin; is not that of a sot。
  Nor are those eyes; which gleam out from under the deep compressed
  brow; wild; intense; hungry; homeless; defiant; and yet complaining;
  the eyes of a sotbut rather the eyes of a man who struggles to
  tell a great secret; and cannot find words for it; and yet wonders
  why men cannot understand; will not believe what seems to him as
  clear as daya tragical face; as you well can see。
  God keep us all from making our lives a tragedy by one great sin。
  And now let us end this sad story with the last words which Mr。
  Browning puts into the mouth of Paracelsus; dying in the hospital at
  Salzburg; which have come literally true:
  Meanwhile; I have done well though not all well。
  As yet men cannot do without contempt;
  'Tis for their good; and therefore fit awhile
  That they reject the weak and scorn the false;
  Rather than praise the strong and true in me:
  But after; they will know me。  If I stoop
  Into a dark tremendous sea of cloud;
  It is but for a time。  I press God's lamp
  Close to my breast; its splendour; soon or late;
  Will pierce the gloom。  I shall emerge one day。
  GEORGE BUCHANAN; SCHOLAR
  The scholar; in the sixteenth century; was a far more important
  personage than now。  The supply of learned men was very small; the
  demand for them very great。  During the whole of the fifteenth; and
  a great part of the sixteenth century; the human mind turned more
  and more from the scholastic philosophy of the Middle Ages to that
  of the Romans and the Greeks; and found more and more in old Pagan
  Art an element which Monastic Art had not; and which was yet
  necessary for the full satisfaction of their craving after the
  Beautiful。  At such a crisis of thought and taste; it was natural
  that the classical scholar; the man who knew old Rome; and still
  more old Greece; should usurp the place of the monk; as teacher of
  mankind; and that scholars should form; for a while; a new and
  powerful aristocracy; limited and privileged; and all the more
  redoubtable; because its power lay in intellect; and had been won by
  intellect alone。
  Those who; whether poor or rich; did not fear the monk and priest;
  at least feared the 〃scholar;〃 who held; so the vulgar believed; the
  keys of that magic lore by which the old necromancers had built
  cities like Rome; and worked marvels of mechanical and chemical
  skill; which the degenerate modern could never equal。
  If the 〃scholar〃 stopped in a town; his hostess probably begged of
  him a charm against toothache or rheumatism。  The penniless knight
  discoursed with him on alchemy; and the chances of retrieving his
  fortune by the art of transmuting metals into gold。  The queen or
  bishop worried him in private about casting their nativities; and
  finding their fates among the stars。  But the statesman; who dealt
  with more practical matters; hired him as an advocate and
  rhetorician; who could fight his master's enemies with the weapons
  of Demosthenes and Cicero。  Wherever the scholar's steps were
  turned; he might be master of others; as long as he was master of
  himself。  The complaints which he so often uttered concerning the
  cruelty of fortune; the fickleness of princes and so forth; were
  probably no more just then than such complaints are now。  Then; as
  now; he got his deserts; and the world bought him at his own price。
  If he chose to sell himself to this patron and to that; he was used
  and thrown away:   if he chose to remain in honourable independence;
  he was courted and feared。
  Among the successful scholars of the sixteenth century; none surely
  is more notable than George Buchanan。  The poor Scotch widow's son;
  by force of native wit; and; as I think; by force of native worth;
  fights his way upward; through poverty and severest persecution; to
  become the correspondent and friend of the greatest literary
  celebrities of the Continent; comparable; in their opinion; to the
  best Latin poets of antiquity; the preceptor of princes; the
  counsellor and spokesman of Scotch statesmen in the most dangerous
  of times; and leaves behind him political treatises; which