登陆注册
15466700000005

第5章 LEAVES FROM A NOTE BOOK(5)

GREAT orators who are not also great writers become very indistinct historical shadows to the generations immediately following them. The spell vanishes with the voice. A man's voice is almost the only part of him entirely obliterated by death. The violet of his native land may be made of his ashes, but nature in her economy seems to have taken no care of his intonations, unless she perpetuates them in restless waves of air surging about the poles. The well-graced actor who leaves no perceptible record of his genius has a decided advantage over the mere orator. The tradition of the player's method and presence is associated with works of endur-ing beauty. Turning to the pages of the drama-tist, we can picture to ourselves the greatness of Garrick or Siddons in this or that scene, in this or that character. It is not so easy to conjure up the impassioned orator from the pages of a dry and possibly illogical argument in favor of or against some long-ago-exploded measure of gov-ernment. The laurels of an orator who is not a master of literary art wither quickly.

ALL the best sands of my life are somehow get-ting into the wrong end of the hour-glass. If I

could only reverse it! Were it in my power to do so, would I?

SHAKESPEARE is forever coming into our affairs --putting in his oar, so to speak--with some pat word or sentence. The conversation, the other evening, had turned on the subject of watches, when one of the gentlemen present, the manager of a large watch-making establish-ment, told us a rather interesting fact. The component parts of a watch are produced by different workmen, who have no concern with the complex piece of mechanism as a whole, and possibly, as a rule, understand it imper-fectly. Each worker needs to be expert in only his own special branch. When the watch has reached a certain advanced state, the work requires a touch as delicate and firm as that of an oculist performing an operation. Here the most skilled and trustworthy artisans are em-ployed; they receive high wages, and have the benefit of a singular indulgence. In case the workman, through too continuous application, finds himself lacking the steadiness of nerve demanded by his task, he is allowed without forfeiture of pay to remain idle temporarily, in order that his hand may recover the requisite precision of touch. As I listened, Hamlet's courtly criticism of the grave-digger's want of sensibility came drifting into my memory.

"The hand of little employment hath the dain-tier sense," says Shakespeare, who has left no-thing unsaid.

IT was a festival in honor of Dai Butsu or some one of the auxiliary deities that preside over the destinies of Japland. For three days and nights the streets of Tokio--where the squat little brown houses look for all the world as if they were mimicking the favorite sitting posture of the Japanese--were crowded with smiling hol-iday makers, and made gay with devices of tinted tissue paper, dolphins, devils, dragons, and mythical winged creatures which at night amia-bly turned themselves into lanterns. Garlands of these, arranged close together, were stretched across the streets from ridgepoles to ridgepole, and your jinrikisha whisked you through inter-minable arbors of soft illumination. The spec-tacle gave one an idea of fairyland, but then all Japan does that.

A land not like ours, that land of strange flowers, Of daemons and spooks with mysterious powers--Of gods who breathe ice, who cause peach-blooms and rice And manage the moonshine and turn on the showers.

Each day has its fair or its festival there, And life seems immune to all trouble and care--Perhaps only seems, in that island of dreams, Sea-girdled and basking in magical air.

They've streets of bazaars filled with lacquers and jars, And silk stuffs, and sword-blades that tell of old wars;They've Fuji's white cone looming up, bleak and lone, As if it were trying to reach to the stars.

They've temples and gongs, and grim Buddhas in throngs, And pearl-powdered geisha with dances and songs:

Each girl at her back has an imp, brown or black, And dresses her hair in remarkable prongs.

On roadside and street toddling images meet, And smirk and kotow in a way that is sweet;Their obis are tied with particular pride, Their silken kimonos hang scant to the feet.

With purrs like a cat they all giggle and chat, Now spreading their fans, and now holding them flat;A fan by its play whispers, "Go now!" or "Stay!"

"I hate you! "I love you!"--a fan can say that!

Beneath a dwarf tree, here and there, two or three Squat coolies are sipping small cups of green tea;They sputter, and leer, and cry out, and appear Like bad little chessmen gone off on a spree.

At night--ah, at night the long streets are a sight, With garlands of soft-colored lanterns alight--Blue, yellow, and red twinkling high overhead, Like thousands of butterflies taking their flight.

Somewhere in the gloom that no lanterns illume Stand groups of slim lilies and jonquils in bloom;On tiptoe, unseen 'mid a tangle of green, They offer the midnight their cups of perfume.

At times, sweet and clear from some tea-garden near, A ripple of laughter steals out to your ear;Anon the wind brings from a samisen's strings The pathos that's born of a smile and a tear.

THE difference between an English audience and a French audience at the theatre is marked.

The Frenchman brings down a witticism on the wing. The Briton pauses for it to alight and give him reasonable time for deliberate aim. In English playhouses an appreciable number of seconds usually precede the smile or the ripple of laughter that follows a facetious turn of the least fineness. I disclaim all responsibility for this statement of my personal observation, since it has recently been indorsed by one of London's most eminent actors.

AT the next table, taking his opal drops of absinthe, was a French gentleman with the blase aspect of an empty champagne-bottle, which always has the air of saying: "I have lived!"

同类推荐
  • The Magic of Oz

    The Magic of Oz

    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。
  • 幼官图

    幼官图

    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。
  • 大乘北宗论

    大乘北宗论

    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。
  • 盘山朗空顺禅师语录

    盘山朗空顺禅师语录

    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。
  • 有叹

    有叹

    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。
热门推荐
  • 转动人脉:构建超级成功人脉网的73个技巧

    转动人脉:构建超级成功人脉网的73个技巧

    在好莱坞,流行一句话:一个人能否成功,不在于你知道什么,而是在于你认识谁。斯坦福研究中心曾经发表一份调查报告,结论指出:一个人赚的钱,12.5%来自知识,87.5%来自关系。人脉决定了财富。本书以人脉为核心,详尽地阐述了提升人脉的方法与技巧,另外,还精心选取了大量创造人脉、维护人脉、提升人脉的经典案例。衷心希望您在翻开本书的同时,就找到开启您人脉存折的密码,也找到一把开启您人生幸福与成功的金钥匙。
  • 神秘帅哥绑架我

    神秘帅哥绑架我

    “我叫千幻澈,我要你陪我三年。”暴雨中,我被一名神秘帅哥给绑架了,帅哥带着我来到了苏格拉贵族学院,在这里我碰到了其余三位帅哥,一个腹黑狡黠、一个温暖阳光、一个妖孽魅惑,而这位神秘帅哥则是冷酷霸道……四位帅哥的突然闯入,将我的生活掀起波浪,而神秘的真相究竟是什么?面对他们的追求我又该作何选择?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 刘志宏,一直在等你

    刘志宏,一直在等你

    7月17日,刘志宏在微博上发出他要退出演艺圈,做回普通人,还唱了《再见》,他的粉丝都要在微博上挽留他,但是他也没办法改变这一切,不管他有多舍不得他的粉丝,必须退出,就这样上了头条
  • 腹黑首席猎妻计划

    腹黑首席猎妻计划

    他们一天之内见了两次。第一次,她拿学生证冒充结婚证,谎称是他的妻子。他觉得有趣,于是记住了她。第二次,她在酒吧喝得烂醉,硬是拉着他要睡他。他觉得有缘,于是让她睡了他。此后的岁月里,他便慢慢编制了一张名为“猎妻”的网。将她困住、套牢,让她逃无可逃,只能撞进他的怀抱。
  • 豪门微恋:杨柳下的邂逅

    豪门微恋:杨柳下的邂逅

    出生,她是柳的希望;20岁,得知柳家和夏家的仇恨;23岁,3年的相处,让她对他日久生情,让他对她日久生情;25岁,有情人终成眷属,他们走进婚姻殿堂......
  • 高冷范的男神:宝贝我爱你

    高冷范的男神:宝贝我爱你

    从小青梅竹马,只因她而分割两地,冥冥之中的相遇……爱与恨
  • 风起云荒

    风起云荒

    称霸虚拟实境的武学宗师李煜,竟然是云荒大陆修仙大派一峰首座嫡传扑街弟子的分神转世?他的身世有何谜团?他的武功能否在仙侠世界称雄?看李煜喝最烈的酒,交最好的朋友,收最仗义的小弟,恋最美的人看海阔云高波澜生……一切尽在风起云荒(我的眼中,仙道亦有人情。本书并不是灭情绝性同门之中亦是你死我活的那种设定,所以前期门派之中不会有太过激烈的人物对抗,有冲突但亦有人情。本书慢热,争取去写那种古典的仙侠。)
  • 九天宝身决

    九天宝身决

    极限爱好者苏源,因一次意外身亡,穿越到同名废材少爷身上...侮辱,漫骂...看少年崛起,快意恩仇!
  • 我的极品未婚妻

    我的极品未婚妻

    身怀绝技的神秘少年林夏来到花花都市,寻找素未谋面的未婚妻退婚,却发现未婚妻是个大美女,并且意外的跟未婚妻和她的绝色闺蜜同居在了一起。一个血气方刚的少年和两个娇滴滴的青春大美女同住一个屋檐,会发生什么样的事呢……
  • 乱天心

    乱天心

    两千年前,两片大陆奇迹般的融合在了一起,并且伴随着上天的一座大殿的出现,发生了太多的故事和传奇。每隔一百年两片大陆就会一次分合,在时光的河流中,两片大陆的分分合合,留下了太多的悲欢离合。在大陆即将再次融合之际,两篇大陆上还会发生什么样的故事和结局呢?