第 45 节
作者:不落的滑翔翼      更新:2021-02-24 23:46      字数:9322
  ercised with the expectation of the immediate coming of the Lord; who; as my Father and those who thought with him believed; would suddenly appear; without the least warning; and would catch up to be with Him in everlasting glory all whom acceptance of the Atonement had sealed for immortality。 These were; on the whole; not numerous; and our belief was that the world; after a few days' amazement at the total disappearance of these persons; would revert to its customary habits of life; merely sinking more rapidly into a moral corruption due to the removal of these souls of salt。 This event an examination of prophecy had led my Father to regard as absolutely imminent; and sometimes; when we parted for the night; he would say with a sparkling rapture in his eyes; 'Who knows? We may meet next in the air; with all the cohorts of God's saints!'
  This conviction I shared; without a doubt; and; indeed;in perfect innocency; I hope; but perhaps with a touch of slyness too;I proposed at the end of the summer holidays that I should stay at home。 'What is the use of my going to school? Let me be with you when we rise to meet the Lord in the air!' To this my Father sharply and firmly replied that it was our duty to carry on our usual avocations to the last; for we knew not the moment of His coming; and we should be together in an instant on that day; how far soever we might be parted upon earth。 I was ashamed; but his argument was logical; and; as it proved; judicious。 My Father lived for nearly a quarter of a century more; never losing the hope of 'not tasting death'; and as the last moments of mortality approached; he was bitterly disappointed at what he held to be a scanty reward of his long faith and patience。 But if my own life's work had been; as I proposed; shelved in expectation of the Lord's imminent advent; I should have cumbered the ground until this day。
  To school; therefore; I returned with a brain full of strange discords; in a huddled mixture of' Endymion' and the Book of Revelation; John Wesley's hymns and 'Midsummer Night's Dream'。 Few boys of my age; I suppose; carried about with them such a confused throng of immature impressions and contradictory hopes。 I was at one moment devoutly pious; at the next haunted by visions of material beauty and longing for sensuous impressions。 In my hot and silly brain; Jesus and Pan held sway together; as in a wayside chapel discordantly and impishly consecrated to Pagan and to Christian rites。 But for the present; as in the great chorus which so marvellously portrays our double nature; 'the folding…star of Bethlehem' was still dominant。 I became more and more pietistic。 Beginning now to versify; I wrote a tragedy in pale imitation of Shakespeare; but on a Biblical and evangelistic subject; and odes that were parodies of those in 'Prometheus Unbound'; but dealt with the approaching advent of our Lord and the rapture of His saints。 My unwholesome excitement; bubbling up in this violent way; reached at last a climax and foamed over。
  It was a summer afternoon; and; being now left very free in my movements; I had escaped from going out with the rest of my school…fellows in their formal walk in charge of an usher。 I had been reading a good deal of poetry; but my heart had translated Apollo and Bacchus into terms of exalted Christian faith。 I was alone; and I lay on a sofa; drawn across a large open window at the top of the school…house; in a room which was used as a study by the boys who were 'going up for examination'。 I gazed down on a labyrinth of garden sloping to the sea; which twinkled faintly beyond the towers of the town。 Each of these gardens held a villa in it; but all the near landscape below me was drowned in foliage。 A wonderful warm light of approaching sunset modelled the shadows and set the broad summits of the trees in a rich glow。 There was an absolute silence below and around me; a magic of suspense seemed to keep every topmost twig from waving。
  Over my soul there swept an immense wave of emotion。 Now; surely; now the great final change must be approaching。 I gazed up into the tenderly…coloured sky; and I broke irresistibly into speech。 'Come now; Lord Jesus;' I cried; 'come now and take me to be for ever with Thee in Thy Paradise。 I am ready to come。 My heart is purged from sin; there is nothing that keeps me rooted to this wicked world。 Oh; come now; now; and take me before I have known the temptations of life; before I have to go to London and all the dreadful things that happen there!' And I raised myself on the sofa; and leaned upon the window…sill; and waited for the glorious apparition。
  This was the highest moment of my religious life; the apex of my striving after holiness。 I waited awhile; watching; and then I felt a faint shame at the theatrical attitude I had adopted; although I was alone。 Still I gazed and still I hoped。 Then a little breeze sprang up and the branches danced。 Sounds began to rise from the road beneath me。 Presently the colour deepened; the evening came on。 From far below there rose to me the chatter of the boys returning home。 The teabell rang;last word of prose to shatter my mystical poetry。 'The Lord has not come; the Lord will never come;' I muttered; and in my heart the artificial edifice of extravagant faith began to totter and crumble。 From that moment forth my Father and I; though the fact was long successfully concealed from him and even from myself; walked in opposite hemispheres of the soul; with 'the thick o' the world between us'。
  EPILOGUE
  THIS narrative; however; must not be allowed to close with the Son in the foreground of the piece。 If it has a value; that value consists in what light it may contrive to throw upon the unique and noble figure of the Father。 With the advance of years; the characteristics of this figure became more severely outlined; more rigorously confined within settled limits。 In relation to the Sonwho presently departed; at a very immature age; for the new life in Londonthe attitude of the Father continued to be one of extreme solicitude; deepening by degrees into disappointment and disenchantment。 He abated no jot or tittle of his demands upon human frailty。 He kept the spiritual cord drawn tight; the Biblical bearingrein was incessantly busy; jerking into position the head of the dejected neophyte。 That young soul; removed from the Father's personal inspection; began to blossom forth crudely and irregularly enough; into new provinces of thought; through fresh layers of experience。 To the painful mentor at home in the West; the centre of anxiety was still the meek and docile heart; dedicated to the Lord's service; which must; at all hazards and with all defiance of the rules of life; be kept unspotted from the world。
  The torment of a postal inquisition began directly I was settled in my London lodgings。 To my Fatherwith his ample leisure; his palpitating apprehension; his ready penthe flow of correspondence offered no trouble at all; it was a grave but gratifying occupation。 To me the almost daily letter of exhortation; with its string of questions about conduct; its series of warnings; grew to be a burden which could hardly be borne; particularly because it involved a reply as punctual and if possible as full as itself。 At the age of seventeen; the metaphysics of the soul are shadowy; and it is a dreadful thing to be forced to define the exact outline of what is so undulating and so shapeless。 To my Father there seemed no reason why I should hesitate to give answers of full metallic ring to his hard and oft…repeated questions; but to me this correspondence was torture。 When I feebly expostulated; when I begged to be left a little to myself; these appeals of mine automatically stimulated; and indeed blew up into fierce flames; the ardour of my Father's alarm。
  The letter; the only too…confidently expected letter; would lie on the table as I descended to breakfast。 It would commonly be; of course; my only letter; unless tempered by a cosy and chatty note from my dear and comfortable stepmother; dealing with such perfectly tranquillizing subjects as the harvest of roses in the garden or the state of health of various neighbours。 But the other; the solitary letter; in its threatening whiteness; with its exquisitely penned addressthere it would lie awaiting me; destroying the taste of the bacon; reducing the flavour of the tea to insipidity。 I might fatuously dally with it; I might pretend not to observe it; but there it lay。 Before the morning's exercise began; I knew that it had to be read; and what was worse; that it had to be answered。 Useless the effort to conceal from myself what it contained。 Like all its precursors; like all its followers; it would insist; with every variety of appeal; on a reiterated declaration that I still fully intended; as in the days of my earliest childhood; 'to be on the Lord's side' in everything。
  In my replies; I would sometimes answer precisely as I was desired to answer; sometimes I would evade the queries; and write about other things; sometimes I would turn upon the tormentor; and urge that my tender youth might be let alone。 It little mattered what form of weakness I put forth by way of baffling my Father's direct; firm; unflinching strength。 To an appeal again