第 6 节
作者:绝对601      更新:2022-04-16 12:12      字数:9255
  an equal claim with any other set of men; for all the comforts and
  all   the   privileges   which   any   home   can     give。   Sailors   work    hard
  enough for their comforts; we must all allow。”
  “Very true; very true。 What Miss Anne says; is very true;” was
  Mr。 Shepherd’s rejoinder; and “Oh! certainly;” was his daughter’s;
  but Sir Walter’s remark was; soon afterwards—
  “The profession has its utility; but I should be sorry to see any
  friend of mine belonging to it。”
  “Indeed!” was the reply; and with a look of surprise。
  “Yes;    it   is   in   two   points  offensive  to   me;  I   have  two  strong
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  grounds   of   objection   to   it。   First;   as   being   the   means   of   bringing
  persons of obscure birth  into  undue  distinction;  and   raising  men
  to honours which their fathers and grandfathers never dreamt of;
  and     secondly;     as   it  cuts   up    a  man’s     youth     and    vigour    most
  horribly;   a   sailor   grows   old   sooner   than   any   other   man。   I   have
  observed it all my life。 A man is in greater danger  in   the   navy  of
  being   insulted   by   the   rise   of   one   whose   father;   his   father   might
  have     disdained      to  speak     to;  and    of  becoming       prematurely        an
  object   of   disgust   himself;      than    in  any   other    line。   One    day   last
  spring; in town; I was in company with two men; striking instances
  of what I am talking of; Lord St Ives; whose father we all know to
  have   been   a   country   curate;   without   bread   to   eat;   I   was   to   give
  place   to   Lord   St   Ives;   and   a   certain   Admiral   Baldwin;   the   most
  deplorable…looking personage you can imagine; his face the colour
  of   mahogany;   rough   and   rugged   to   the   last   degree;   all   lines   and
  wrinkles;      nine    grey   hairs   of   a  side;  and    nothing     but   a   dab   of
  powder  at  top。—‘In   the  name   of  heaven;   who   is   that   old   fellow?’
  said    I;  to  a  friend    of  mine     who    was    standing     near;   (Sir   Basil
  Morley)。 ‘Old fellow!’ cried Sir Basil; ‘it is Admiral Baldwin。 What
  do  you  take   his   age   to   be?’   ‘Sixty;’   said   I;   ‘or   perhaps   sixty…two。’
  ‘Forty;’     replied     Sir    Basil;    ‘forty;   and    no    more。’     Picture     to
  yourselves       my    amazement;         I  shall    not   easily    forget    Admiral
  Baldwin。 I never saw quite so wretched an example of what a sea…
  faring life can do; but to a degree; I know it is the same with them
  all: they are all knocked about; and exposed to every climate; and
  every weather; till they are not fit to be seen。 It is a pity they are
  not    knocked      on   the   head     at  once;    before    they    reach    Admiral
  Baldwin’s age。”
  “Nay; Sir Walter;” cried Mrs。 Clay; “this is being severe indeed。
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  Have   a   little   mercy   on   the   poor   men。   We   are   not   all   born   to   be
  handsome。 The sea is no beautifier; certainly; sailors do grow old
  betimes; I have observed it; they soon lose the look of youth。 But
  then; is not it the same with many other professions; perhaps most
  other? Soldiers; in active service; are not at all better off: and even
  in the quieter professions; there is a toil and a labour of the mind;
  if not of the body; which seldom leaves a man’s looks to the natural
  effect of time。 The lawyer plods; quite care…worn; the physician is
  up    at   all  hours;   and    travelling    in   all  weather;     and    even    the
  clergyman—”   she stopt  a   moment  to  consider  what  might  do  for
  the clergyman;—“and even the clergyman; you know; is obliged to
  go into infected rooms; and expose his health and looks to all the
  injury   of   a   poisonous   atmosphere。   In   fact;   as   I   have   long   been
  convinced;   though   every   profession   is   necessary   and   honourable
  in its turn; it is only the lot of those who are not obliged to follow
  any; who can live in a regular way; in the country; choosing their
  own hours; following their own pursuits; and   living  on   their  own
  property; without the torment of trying for more; it is only their lot;
  I say; to hold the blessings of health and a good appearance to the
  utmost:   I   know   no   other   set   of   men   but   what   lose   something   of
  their personableness when they cease to be quite young。”
  It   seemed   as   if   Mr。   Shepherd;   in   this   anxiety   to   bespeak   Sir
  Walter’s     goodwill     towards     a  naval    officer   as  tenant;    had    been
  gifted   with   foresight;   for   the   very   first   application   for   the   house
  was from an Admiral Croft; with whom he shortly afterwards fell
  into   company   in   attending   the   quarter   sessions   at   Taunton;   and
  indeed;   he   had     received   a    hint   of   the   Admiral   from    a   London
  correspondent。 By the report which he hastened over to Kellynch
  to make; Admiral Croft was a native of Somersetshire; who having
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  acquired   a   very   handsome   fortune;   was   wishing   to   settle   in   his
  own country; and had come down to Taunton in order to  look at
  some advertised places in that immediate neighbourhood; which;
  however;   had   not   suited   him;   that   accidentally   hearing—(it   was
  just   as   he   had   foretold;    Mr。   Shepherd      observed;      Sir  Walter’s
  concerns could not be kept a secret;)— accidentally hearing of the
  possibility   of   Kellynch   Hall   being   to   let;   and   understanding   his
  (Mr。   Shepherd’s)   connection   with   the   owner;   he   had   introduced
  himself to him in order  to  make   particular  inquiries; and   had;   in
  the   course   of   a   pretty   long   conference;   expressed   as   strong   an
  inclination for the place as a man who knew it only by description;
  could     feel;  and   given    Mr。   Shepherd;      in  his  explicit   account     of
  himself;     every    proof   of   his  being    a  most    responsible;      eligible
  tenant。
  “And who  is Admiral   Croft?”   was   Sir Walter’s   cold   suspicious
  inquiry。
  Mr。 Shepherd   answered   for  his being  of  a   gentleman’s   family;
  and   mentioned   a   place;   and   Anne;        after   the  little   pause  which
  followed; added—
  “He is rear admiral of the white。 He was in the Trafalgar action;
  and   has   been   in   the   East   Indies   since;   he   was   stationed   there;   I
  believe; several years。”
  “Then I take it for granted;” observed Sir Walter; “that his face
  is about as orange as the cuffs and capes of my livery。”
  Mr。 Shepherd hastened to assure him; that Admiral Croft was a
  very hale; hearty; well…looking man; a little weather…beaten; to be
  sure; but not much; and quite the gentleman in all his notions and
  behaviour;—not          likely   to   make     the   smallest     difficulty    about
  terms;—only wanted a comfortable home; and to get into it as soon
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  as possible;—knew he must pay for his convenience;—knew what
  rent  a   ready…furnished   house   of   that   consequence   might   fetch;—
  should   not   have   been   surprised   if  Sir   Walter   had   asked   more;—
  had inquired about the manor;—would be glad of the deputation;
  certainly; but made no great point of it;—said he sometimes took
  out a gun; but never killed;—quite the gentleman。
  Mr。 Shepherd was eloquent on the subject; pointing out all the
  circumstances of the Admiral’s family; which made him peculiarly
  desirable      as   a  tenant。    He    was    a  married      man;    and    without
  children; the very state to be wished for。 A house was never taken
  good   care  of;   Mr。   Shepherd   observed;   without  a   lady:   he  did   not
  know;   whether   furniture   might   not   be   in   danger   of   suffering   as
  much      where     there    was    no   lady;   as   where     there   were     many
  children。 A lady; without a family; was the very best preserver of
  furniture   in   the   w