man, hope of him; leave him to try yet what he will do. While life lasts,
hope lasts for every man.
Of Rousseau's
literary talents, greatly
celebrated" target="_blank" title="a.著名的">
celebrated still among his
countrymen, I do not say much. His Books, like himself, are what I call
un
healthy; not the good sort of Books. There is a sensuality in Rousseau.
Combined with such an
intellectual gift as his, it makes pictures of a
certain
gorgeousattractiveness: but they are not
genuinelypoetical. Not
white
sunlight: something _operatic_; a kind of rose-pink,
artificialbedizenment. It is
frequent, or rather it is
universal, among the French
since his time. Madame de Stael has something of it; St. Pierre; and down
onwards to the present
astonishing convulsionary "Literature of
Desperation," it is everywhere
abundant. That same _rose-pink_ is not the
right hue. Look at a Shakspeare, at a Goethe, even at a Walter Scott! He
who has once seen into this, has seen the difference of the True from the
Sham-True, and will discriminate them ever afterwards.
We had to observe in Johnson how much good a Prophet, under all
disadvantages and disorganizations, can accomplish for the world. In
Rousseau we are called to look rather at the
fearfulamount of evil which,
under such disorganization, may accompany the good. Historically it is a
most
pregnantspectacle, that of Rousseau. Banished into Paris
garrets, in
the
gloomy company of his own Thoughts and Necessities there;
driven from
post to
pillar; fretted, exasperated till the heart of him went mad, he had
grown to feel deeply that the world was not his friend nor the world's law.
It was
expedient, if any way possible, that such a man should _not_ have
been set in flat
hostility with the world. He could be cooped into
garrets, laughed at as a maniac, left to
starve like a wild beast in his
cage;--but he could not be hindered from
setting the world on fire. The
French Revolution found its Evangelist in Rousseau. His semi-delirious
speculations on the miseries of
civilized life, the preferability of the
savage to the
civilized, and such like, helped well to produce a whole
delirium in France generally. True, you may well ask, What could the
world, the
governors of the world, do with such a man? Difficult to say
what the
governors of the world could do with him! What he could do with
them is unhappily clear enough,--_guillotine_ a great many of them! Enough
now of Rousseau.
It was a curious
phenomenon, in the withered, unbelieving second-hand
Eighteenth Century, that of a Hero starting up, among the
artificialpasteboard figures and productions, in the guise of a Robert Burns. Like a
little well in the rocky desert places,--like a sudden
splendor of Heaven
in the
artificial Vauxhall! People knew not what to make of it. They took
it for a piece of the Vauxhall fire-work; alas, it _let_ itself be so
taken, though struggling half-blindly, as in
bitterness of death, against
that! Perhaps no man had such a false
reception from his fellow-men. Once
more a very
wasteful life-drama was enacted under the sun.
The
tragedy of Burns's life is known to all of you. Surely we may say, if
discrepancy between place held and place merited
constitute perverseness of
lot for a man, no lot could be more perverse then Burns's. Among those
second-hand acting-figures, _mimes_ for most part, of the Eighteenth
Century, once more a giant Original Man; one of those men who reach down to
the
perennial Deeps, who take rank with the Heroic among men: and he was
born in a poor Ayrshire hut. The largest soul of all the British lands
came among us in the shape of a hard-handed Scottish Peasant.
His Father, a poor toiling man, tried various things; did not succeed in
any; was involved in
continual difficulties. The Steward, Factor as the
Scotch call him, used to send letters and threatenings, Burns says, "which
threw us all into tears." The brave, hard-toiling, hard-suffering Father,
his brave
heroine of a wife; and those children, of whom Robert was one!
In this Earth, so wide
otherwise, no shelter for _them_. The letters
"threw us all into tears:" figure it. The brave Father, I say always;--a
_silent_ Hero and Poet; without whom the son had never been a
speaking one!
Burns's Schoolmaster came afterwards to London,
learnt what good society
was; but declares that in no meeting of men did he ever enjoy better
discourse than at the
hearth of this
peasant. And his poor "seven acres of
nursery-ground,"--not that, nor the
miserable patch of clay-farm, nor
anything he tried to get a living by, would
prosper with him; he had a sore
unequal battle all his days. But he stood to it
valiantly; a wise,
faithful, unconquerable man;--swallowing down how many sore sufferings
daily into silence; fighting like an
unseen Hero,--nobody publishing
newspaper paragraphs about his nobleness; voting pieces of plate to him!
However, he was not lost; nothing is lost. Robert is there the
outcome of
him,--and indeed of many generations of such as him.
This Burns appeared under every
disadvantage: uninstructed, poor, born
only to hard
manual toil; and
writing, when it came to that, in a rustic
special
dialect, known only to a small
province of the country he lived in.
Had he written, even what he did write, in the general language of England,
I doubt not he had already become
universally recognized as being, or
capable to be, one of our greatest men. That he should have tempted so
many to
penetrate through the rough husk of that
dialect of his, is proof
that there lay something far from common within it. He has gained a
certain
recognition, and is continuing to do so over all quarters of our
wide Saxon world: wheresoever a Saxon
dialect is
spoken, it begins to be
understood, by personal
inspection of this and the other, that one of the
most
considerable Saxon men of the Eighteenth Century was an Ayrshire
Peasant named Robert Burns. Yes, I will say, here too was a piece of the
right Saxon stuff: strong as the Harz-rock, rooted in the depths of the
world;--rock, yet with wells of living
softness in it! A wild impetuous
whirlwind of
passion and
faculty slumbered quiet there; such heavenly
_melody_
dwelling in the heart of it. A noble rough genuineness; homely,
rustic, honest; true
simplicity of strength; with its
lightning-fire, with
its soft dewy pity;--like the old Norse Thor, the Peasant-god!
Burns's Brother Gilbert, a man of much sense and worth, has told me that
Robert, in his young days, in spite of their
hardship, was usually the
gayest of speech; a fellow of
infinitefrolic,
laughter, sense and heart;
far pleasanter to hear there, stript cutting peats in the bog, or such
like, than he ever afterwards knew him. I can well believe it. This basis
of mirth ("_fond gaillard_," as old Marquis Mirabeau calls it), a primal
element of
sunshine and joyfulness, coupled with his other deep and earnest
qualities, is one of the most
attractivecharacteristics of Burns. A large
fund of Hope dwells in him; spite of his
tragical history, he is not a
mourning man. He shakes his sorrows gallantly aside; bounds forth
victorious over them. It is as the lion shaking "dew-drops from his mane;"
as the swift-bounding horse, that _laughs_ at the shaking of the
spear.--But indeed, Hope, Mirth, of the sort like Burns's, are they not the
outcomeproperly of warm
generousaffection,--such as is the
beginning of
all to every man?
You would think it strange if I called Burns the most
gifted British soul
we had in all that century of his: and yet I believe the day is coming
when there will be little danger in
saying so. His
writings, all that he
_did_ under such obstructions, are only a poor
fragment of him. Professor
Stewart remarked very
justly, what indeed is true of all Poets good for
much, that his
poetry was not any particular
faculty; but the general
result of a naturally
vigorous original mind expressing itself in that way.
Burns's gifts, expressed in conversation, are the theme of all that ever
heard him. All kinds of gifts: from the gracefulest utterances of
courtesy, to the highest fire of
passionate speech; loud floods of mirth,
soft wailings of
affection, laconic
emphasis, clear
piercinginsight; all
was in him. Witty duchesses
celebrate him as a man whose speech "led them
off their feet." This is beautiful: but still more beautiful that which
Mr. Lockhart has recorded, which I have more than once alluded to, How the
waiters and ostlers at inns would get out of bed, and come crowding to hear
this man speak! Waiters and ostlers:--they too were men, and here was a
man! I have heard much about his speech; but one of the best things I ever
heard of it was, last year, from a
venerable gentleman long familiar with
him. That it was speech
distinguished by always _having something in it_.
"He spoke rather little than much," this old man told me; "sat rather
silent in those early days, as in the company of persons above him; and
always when he did speak, it was to throw new light on the matter." I know
not why any one should ever speak
otherwise!--But if we look at his general
force of soul, his
healthy _robustness_ every way, the rugged
downrightness, penetration,
generous valor and manfulness that was in
him,--where shall we
readily find a better-
gifted man?
Among the great men of the Eighteenth Century, I sometimes feel as if Burns
might be found to
resemble Mirabeau more than any other. They differ
widely in vesture; yet look at them intrinsically. There is the same burly
thick-necked strength of body as of soul;--built, in both cases, on what
the old Marquis calls a _fond gaillard_. By nature, by course of breeding,
indeed by nation, Mirabeau has much more of
bluster; a noisy, forward,
unresting man. But the
characteristic of Mirabeau too is veracity and
sense, power of true _
insight_,
superiority of
vision. The thing that he
says is worth remembering. It is a flash of
insight into some object or
other: so do both these men speak. The same raging
passions;
capable too
in both of manifesting themselves as the tenderest noble
affections. Wit;
wild
laughter,
energy, directness,
sincerity: these were in both. The